Sans Superellipse Rulur 6 is a light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, posters, packaging, futuristic, technical, sleek, retro sci‑fi, minimal, tech forward, systematic, streamlined, distinctive geometry, rounded corners, squared curves, monoline feel, angular terminals, soft geometry.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superelliptic shapes, combining straight stems with softly radiused corners. Curves tend to flatten into squarish bowls (notably in C, O, D, and a), giving the design a compact, engineered silhouette rather than a purely circular one. Strokes show a crisp, clean edge and a controlled, slightly calligraphic tension where joins and terminals taper into fine horizontals, producing a sharp, airy finish on letters like S, J, Z, and the bottom of g. Counters are generous and open, with simplified forms and minimal interior detailing; overall spacing feels even and deliberate, supporting clear rhythm in words and lines of text.
This font suits interface labels, dashboards, and product surfaces where a clean, engineered look is desirable, especially at medium-to-large sizes. Its geometric rhythm also works well for headlines, posters, and modern brand systems that want a sci‑fi or tech-forward tone without becoming overly decorative.
The overall tone is futuristic and instrument-like, with a streamlined, constructed personality reminiscent of modern tech interfaces and retro space-age graphics. Rounded corners soften the geometry, keeping the voice approachable while still feeling precise and designed.
The design appears intended to blend functional legibility with a distinctive superelliptic geometry, using rounded-rectangle construction and crisp terminals to create a modern, tech-oriented voice. It aims to feel contemporary and systematized while remaining friendly through softened corners and open counters.
Distinctive details include flattened, squarish round letters, narrow, blade-like horizontal endings, and a consistent use of soft radii at corners. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, reading cleanly alongside capitals, and the lowercase keeps a simplified, modern structure with minimal modulation and open forms.