Sans Superellipse Arguz 14 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui headings, product labeling, posters, sci‑fi titles, futuristic, technical, aerial, sleek, minimal, futurism, speed, geometric clarity, streamlined look, modernist tone, monoline, rounded corners, oblique slant, extended, geometric.
A monoline, oblique sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistently softened corners and long, straight segments. Curves are shallow and squared-off rather than circular, giving counters a boxy, aerodynamic feel. Strokes stay even throughout, terminals are clean and mostly open, and many joins favor crisp angles over swelling or modulation. Proportions run horizontally extended with a compact vertical feel; spacing reads open and modern, and the numerals follow the same squared-round geometry for a cohesive set.
Best suited for display settings where a sleek, engineered voice is needed—technology branding, interface titles, product labels, and contemporary poster work. It can also work for short editorial pulls or packaging accents where a futuristic slant and rounded-square geometry help establish a distinctive identity.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, like labeling on contemporary devices or concept vehicles. Its thin, slanted skeleton and rounded-square curves create a sense of speed and precision while remaining approachable due to the softened corners.
The design appears intended to merge a streamlined, forward-looking aesthetic with geometric clarity, using superellipse-based rounds and a steady oblique angle to suggest motion and modernity without adding decorative complexity.
Round letters (such as O/C/G and their lowercase counterparts) lean toward squircle-shaped outlines, and bowls frequently read as rounded boxes rather than true ovals. Diagonals and angular shapes (notably in letters like V/W/X/Z and the K forms) reinforce a drafted, engineered rhythm that stays consistent across the set.