Sans Superellipse Onray 3 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app headers, tech branding, product design, signage, futuristic, tech, clean, modular, friendly, modernity, system feel, clarity, brand voice, interface use, rounded corners, square-rounded, geometric, streamlined, distinctive numerals.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistent, even stroke thickness and smoothly radiused corners. The overall texture is open and airy, with generous inner counters and a wide stance that keeps shapes stable and legible at display sizes. Terminals are mostly squared-off with soft rounding rather than tapering, and curves transition into straights with a controlled, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are compact and rectangular, while lowercase uses similarly squared bowls and shoulders; several letters lean on simplified, modular construction (notably in forms like a, e, g, and t). Numerals follow the same system, mixing rounded squares and straight strokes for a cohesive, interface-like rhythm.
Well suited to UI labels, navigation, and product surfaces where a clean, modern geometry supports quick scanning. Its wide, rounded forms also work well for tech branding, packaging, and signage, especially when you want a futuristic but friendly presence. It performs best in headlines, short copy, and interface typographic systems where its distinctive letterforms can be appreciated.
The design reads contemporary and tech-forward, with a calm, polished voice that feels engineered rather than expressive. Its rounded geometry adds approachability, keeping the futuristic tone from becoming cold. The consistent stroke and modular curves suggest digital systems, dashboards, and product aesthetics.
The font appears designed to deliver a contemporary, system-like aesthetic using a consistent rounded-rect geometry across letters and numbers. The intention seems to balance a futuristic, digital tone with friendly softness through generous radii, open counters, and steady stroke rhythm.
Spacing and proportions favor clarity, with counters that stay open even in compact shapes. Several glyphs use distinctive, stylized constructions that enhance personality and recognizability, especially in the lowercase and figures, making the face better suited to branding and display than long-form text.