Sans Superellipse Libe 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Norden Display' by Asgeir Pedersen and 'Frio' by Lamatas un Slazdi (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech titles, product signage, packaging, techy, futuristic, clean, friendly, utilitarian, modernization, systematic design, robust display, ui clarity, brand distinctiveness, rounded, squared, geometric, soft corners, compact.
A rounded, geometric sans with a superelliptical construction: many curves resolve into softened corners and rounded-rectangle bowls. Strokes are monoline and heavy, with generous corner radii and mostly closed apertures that create a compact, solid texture. Terminals are consistently rounded, and counters tend toward squarish ovals, giving the face a controlled, modular feel. Uppercase forms read wide and stable, while lowercase maintains simple, single‑storey constructions and minimal interior detailing; numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry with clear, schematic shapes.
Works well for interface labeling, product/tech branding, and bold titling where a compact, rounded-rect geometry reinforces a modern, engineered aesthetic. It also suits signage and packaging that benefit from high-impact, friendly-industrial letterforms.
The overall tone is contemporary and tech-forward, combining a machine-made modularity with softened edges that keep it approachable. It feels modern and UI-oriented—more “device” than “editorial”—with a steady rhythm that suggests systems, dashboards, and product interfaces.
Likely intended to deliver a contemporary geometric voice built from superelliptical primitives—prioritizing consistency, robustness, and a distinctive rounded-rectangle character that stays readable in short bursts and display settings.
The design emphasizes consistency of corner rounding across letters and figures, producing a uniform silhouette and strong word-shape blocks at larger sizes. The closed apertures and squared counters increase density, which can read especially sturdy in headings and short lines.