Sans Superellipse Dyda 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, signage, headlines, packaging, futuristic, tech, clean, modular, friendly, modernize, systematize, differentiate, digital feel, rounded corners, octagonal, geometric, stencil-like, soft square.
A geometric sans built from squared-off, superellipse-like forms with consistently rounded corners and largely uniform stroke thickness. Curves tend to resolve into short flats, giving many letters an octagonal or soft-rectangular silhouette rather than a purely circular one. Terminals are smooth and blunt, counters are open and evenly proportioned, and joins stay crisp without flare, producing a precise, engineered rhythm. The overall spacing and shapes feel systematically constructed, with a slightly “cut” or segmented impression in places that reinforces a modular look.
Well suited to user interfaces, product labeling, and wayfinding where a clean, contemporary voice is needed. The distinctive rounded-rect geometry also makes it strong for headlines, tech or gaming identities, and packaging that benefits from a modern, engineered feel.
The tone is contemporary and tech-forward, with a controlled, schematic feel softened by rounded corners. It reads as modern and efficient rather than expressive, landing in a space between sci‑fi UI lettering and clean industrial branding. The smooth geometry keeps it approachable while still signaling precision and digital craft.
The font appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical, readable sans, balancing a futuristic modular aesthetic with straightforward letterforms. Its consistent corner treatment and systematic construction suggest a focus on cohesive visual identity across text and numerals.
The design language is especially evident in rounded-rectangle bowls and squared arcs, which create a distinctive, consistent texture across both capitals and lowercase. Numerals share the same softened-angular construction, supporting cohesive display settings and interface-style compositions.