Sans Superellipse Valeh 2 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, ui labels, signage, posters, futuristic, tech, clean, geometric, friendly, modernize, soften geometry, tech branding, display impact, rounded, square-rounded, modular, streamlined, high-contrast-free.
A squarish, rounded-rectangle sans with monoline construction and generous corner radii that push many curves toward superellipse-like forms. Counters are open and roomy, with flattened arcs and soft terminals that keep the rhythm even across text. Uppercase forms are broad and stable, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y, K) are crisp and straight, adding structure against the rounded bowls. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, with wide proportions and clear interior spaces for legibility at display sizes.
Best suited to display typography where its wide, rounded-square shapes can be a defining visual feature—headlines, logos, product branding, and packaging. The open counters and straightforward forms also work well for short UI labels, wayfinding, and signage, especially in tech or contemporary contexts.
The overall tone feels modern and slightly sci‑fi, combining friendly rounded corners with a precise, engineered geometry. It reads as clean and tech-forward rather than expressive or calligraphic, giving text a sleek, contemporary presence.
The design appears intended to blend geometric clarity with approachability by using rounded-rectangle curves and consistent monoline strokes. Its wide proportions and superelliptical bowls suggest a focus on contemporary branding and interface-forward aesthetics, prioritizing a distinctive silhouette and clean readability in larger sizes.
Stroke endings are consistently softened, and many joins favor smooth, squared curves over circular geometry, producing a distinctive “rounded-square” silhouette in letters like O, D, P, and G. The design maintains a steady baseline and cap line presence, with a notably wide footprint that emphasizes horizontal flow in headlines.