Sans Superellipse Vubu 10 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui, headlines, branding, posters, packaging, futuristic, techy, sleek, clean, industrial, tech aesthetic, modern display, geometric clarity, interface feel, rounded corners, squared rounds, geometric, extended, minimal.
A geometric sans built from squared-off, superellipse-like curves and straight segments, with consistently rounded corners and largely uniform stroke thickness. The overall footprint is extended and spacious, with wide bowls and open counters, giving the letters a broad, horizontal presence. Curves resolve into flattened arcs rather than perfect circles, and terminals are clean and blunt, reinforcing a precision-cut, modular feel. Lowercase forms are compact and highly legible, with a notably tall x-height and simple, unembellished construction; numerals echo the same rounded-rectangle logic.
Well-suited for interface titles, tech product branding, gaming or sci‑fi themed graphics, and bold headlines where a wide, modern voice is desired. It can also work for short blocks of copy in promotional layouts when generous spacing and a clean, geometric look are priorities.
The tone is modern and engineered, leaning toward a sci‑fi and interface aesthetic. Its rounded-square geometry feels friendly enough to avoid harshness, while still reading as technical, streamlined, and contemporary.
Likely designed to deliver a contemporary, techno-geometric identity using rounded-rectangle construction and uniform strokes, balancing a futuristic feel with straightforward readability. The wide proportions and softened corners suggest an aim for high-impact display use without sacrificing clarity in mixed-case settings.
Round characters like O, Q, and 0 are differentiated through squared curves and subtle internal proportions rather than calligraphic contrast, keeping the system cohesive. The diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and angular, providing contrast against the soft-cornered rounds. Overall spacing and shapes suggest a display-forward rhythm that stays readable in short text lines.