Sans Superellipse Lawa 3 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui display, tech branding, posters, futuristic, techno, clean, playful, retro-future, interface feel, sci‑fi styling, modern branding, geometric system, rounded corners, superelliptic, extended, geometric, soft terminals.
A wide, monoline sans with superelliptic construction: strokes are built from rounded-rectangle curves and softened corners, creating a consistent, modular geometry across the alphabet. Counters are open and squarish, and most joins resolve with smooth radiused transitions rather than sharp angles. Horizontal strokes tend to feel long and stable, while diagonals (notably in V/W/X) are simplified into clean, straight segments that contrast with the rounded bowls. The overall rhythm is even and engineered, with generous internal space and a uniform stroke that keeps letterforms crisp at display sizes.
Best suited to short, prominent settings such as headlines, posters, product branding, and logotypes where its wide stance and rounded-rect geometry can be appreciated. It also fits interface-style display use (dashboards, app headers, game/UI screens) where a futuristic yet friendly tone is desired.
The tone reads futuristic and device-like, with a friendly softness from the rounded corners rather than a cold industrial edge. Its extended proportions and rounded-rect geometry evoke sci‑fi interfaces, arcade/retro-tech aesthetics, and modern UI branding that wants to feel sleek but approachable.
The design appears intended to translate a superelliptic, rounded-rectangle motif into a cohesive alphabet with consistent stroke logic and a modern, tech-forward voice. By pairing wide proportions with softened corners, it aims to balance precision and approachability for contemporary display typography.
Distinctive rounded-rect counters and squared-off curves give the font a strong stylistic fingerprint, especially in O/Q and the numerals. The forms favor clarity and graphic impact over traditional text texture, making the design feel more like a system of parts than calligraphic writing.