Sans Superellipse Abmor 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, wayfinding, branding, packaging, posters, modern, technical, clean, friendly, neutral, system design, clarity, modern branding, ui friendliness, rounded, geometric, rectilinear, open, smooth.
A geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and consistently softened corners throughout. Strokes are even and smooth, with a squarish, superellipse rhythm in bowls and counters that keeps curves controlled rather than fully circular. Terminals are mostly blunt with rounded edges, and joins stay crisp and linear, giving letters a tidy, engineered feel. Spacing reads fairly generous and regular, supporting clear word shapes in continuous text while keeping a compact, modular silhouette.
Well-suited for interface typography, app/OS labels, dashboards, and other screen-forward contexts where steady rhythm and simple construction aid quick recognition. It can also work for contemporary branding, packaging, and signage that benefits from a clean, rounded-tech character. In larger sizes it reads confidently for headings and display lines without becoming overly stylized.
The overall tone is contemporary and pragmatic, with a mild friendliness coming from the rounded corners. It feels tech-adjacent and systematic rather than expressive, projecting clarity and reliability. The shapes suggest a UI-minded neutrality with just enough warmth to avoid looking harsh.
The design appears intended to blend geometric precision with approachable rounding, creating a versatile sans for modern digital and product environments. Its consistent corner treatment and superellipse-based forms prioritize visual cohesion and straightforward legibility across letters and numerals.
Round forms like O/Q and digits lean toward squared geometry, and the diagonal-heavy letters (K, V, W, X, Y) keep a straight, constructed look. The lowercase shows single-storey forms (notably a and g), reinforcing a simplified, modern voice. Numerals match the same rounded-rect profile, staying consistent with the alphabet’s modular geometry.