Sans Superellipse Velih 3 is a light, wide, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, gaming ui, display titles, product labeling, sci-fi graphics, futuristic, technical, sleek, aerodynamic, digital, futurism, streamlining, geometric system, interface utility, modern branding, angular, chamfered, monoline, extended, octagonal.
A slanted, monoline sans with extended proportions and a consistent superelliptic construction. Curves are largely replaced by rounded-rectangle bowls and chamfered corners, creating octagonal counters in forms like O, D, and 0. Terminals are crisp and mostly straight-cut, with frequent use of angled joins and short horizontal/diagonal strokes that emphasize a forward-leaning rhythm. Spacing reads relatively open, and the overall texture stays even due to the uniform stroke weight and simplified interior shapes.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where its geometric cornering and slanted rhythm can read as intentional character: technology and esports branding, sci‑fi themed graphics, interface headings, product names, and dashboard-style labeling. It can also work for numbers-heavy contexts like scores, model numbers, and compact callouts where a consistent, engineered look is desired.
The design communicates a clean, forward-moving, high-tech tone—more cockpit-instrument than editorial text. Its geometric corners and streamlined italics give it a synthetic, engineered feel that suggests speed, precision, and modern interfaces rather than warmth or tradition.
The letterforms appear designed to blend italic momentum with a superelliptic, rounded-rectangle skeleton, producing a modernist “techno” voice. The consistent corner treatment and monoline strokes suggest an intention to maintain a uniform, machine-like texture across both text and numerals while prioritizing a sleek, contemporary silhouette.
Distinctive, squared-off rounds and angular diagonals make the alphabet feel cohesive and deliberately mechanical. The digit set follows the same rounded-rectangle logic, keeping numerals visually compatible for readouts and labeling, while the overall slant adds motion and urgency to lines of text.