Sans Superellipse Delev 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, sportswear, tech ui, posters, headlines, techno, sporty, futuristic, streamlined, energetic, modernize, add speed, signal technology, create cohesion, rounded corners, oblique slant, monoline, squared curves, open apertures.
A monoline, oblique sans with rounded-rectangle (superelliptic) construction throughout. Curves resolve into softened corners rather than true circles, giving bowls and counters a squarish, engineered feel. Terminals are clean and lightly rounded, joins are crisp, and the overall rhythm is forward-leaning with compact, controlled spacing in text. Uppercase forms read wide and stable, while lowercase keeps a tidy, modern skeleton with open apertures and consistent stroke behavior; numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry for a cohesive set.
Well-suited to branding systems that want a modern, performance-oriented feel, as well as sports and automotive-style graphics. It can work in interface labels, dashboards, and product packaging where clarity and a streamlined texture are desirable. In longer passages it remains legible, but it shines most in short-to-medium text, headlines, and display settings where the distinctive rounded-square forms are a feature.
The tone is contemporary and kinetic, suggesting speed and precision. Its softened-square geometry and steady slant evoke a sporty, tech-forward personality—more “instrument panel” than “editorial,” with a clean, confident voice.
Likely designed to deliver a clean, modern italic sans with a distinctive superelliptic geometry—balancing friendliness from rounded corners with a technical, engineered structure. The consistent monoline strokes and squared curves aim for a cohesive, contemporary texture across letters and numerals.
The design leans on angular diagonals and squared bowls (notably in letters like O/Q and the numerals), which helps maintain a consistent industrial texture across mixed-case settings. The italic angle is integral to the construction rather than an added slant, keeping counters and curves stable in running text.