Sans Superellipse Orriy 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, branding, signage, editorial, packaging, modern, technical, clean, neutral, efficient, clarity, modernity, systematic, friendliness, versatility, squared-round, superelliptic, geometric, monolinear, rounded corners.
A clean sans with superelliptic, squared-round construction and consistently softened corners. Strokes are largely monolinear with gently modulated joins, and curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls rather than true circles. Counters are open and tidy, terminals are mostly flat, and overall spacing feels even, producing a steady rhythm in text. Uppercase forms read straightforward and geometric; lowercase uses simple, utilitarian shapes with single-storey a and g and a narrow, hooked f, keeping the texture orderly.
Works well for user interfaces and product surfaces where a clean, modern voice and consistent shapes aid scanning. The squared-round forms also suit contemporary branding and packaging, especially in tech, tools, and lifestyle contexts. It can handle short editorial settings, subheads, and signage where a neutral but characterful geometric texture is desired.
The overall tone is contemporary and functional, with a subtly engineered feel. Rounded corners soften the geometry, adding approachability without shifting into playful or hand-drawn territory. It suggests clarity and precision suited to interface-forward and product-minded design.
Likely designed to deliver a modern geometric sans that remains friendly and legible through rounded-rectangle construction and restrained detailing. The consistent corner radii and simplified lowercase aim for a cohesive, system-like family feel that performs reliably across display and text sizes.
Round letters like O/Q and numerals lean toward squarish bowls with generous corner radii, reinforcing the superellipse theme. The Q uses a minimal tail treatment, and diagonals (V, W, X, Y) stay crisp against the otherwise rounded system, creating a balanced, slightly techy tension. Numerals are simple and robust, matching the letterforms in corner behavior and stroke weight.