Sans Superellipse Allab 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, tech branding, headlines, packaging, techno, futuristic, clean, precise, modular, digital geometry, systematic consistency, modern clarity, friendly tech, rounded, geometric, square-rounded, streamlined, minimal.
This typeface is built from consistent, monoline strokes and rounded-rectangle curves, producing squarish counters and softened corners throughout. Curves are rendered as smooth superellipse-like turns rather than true circles, giving bowls and apertures a rectilinear, engineered feel. Terminals are generally flat and controlled, with a compact, slightly condensed rhythm in the lowercase and a crisp, uniform cap structure. Figures follow the same rounded-square logic, with open, legible shapes and minimal contrast between straight and curved segments.
It suits interfaces, dashboards, and device contexts where a modern, engineered aesthetic is desired, and it performs well in branding for tech, gaming, and electronics. The squared-round construction and even stroke weight also make it effective for short headlines, wayfinding, and packaging where clarity and a contemporary tone are priorities.
The overall tone feels futuristic and technical, with a calm, system-like regularity. Its rounded corners soften the geometry, balancing a digital, modular voice with an approachable cleanliness. The result reads as contemporary and utilitarian rather than expressive or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to translate digital, grid-based geometry into a friendly sans by rounding corners and keeping stroke treatment consistent. It prioritizes a cohesive modular skeleton across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals to deliver a recognizable, technology-forward voice with dependable readability.
The sample text shows steady texture and consistent spacing at display sizes, with distinctive squared bowls that help it stand out from more purely circular geometrics. Angular letters like K, V, W, X, and Z stay sharp while still harmonizing with the rounded-corner construction used elsewhere.