Sans Superellipse Odmi 4 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, sports graphics, game ui, techy, futuristic, industrial, sporty, display impact, geometric system, tech tone, logo friendliness, rounded corners, squared bowls, soft terminals, geometric, compact apertures.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle forms with consistently softened corners. Strokes are thick and even, with a squarish skeleton in many letters (notably O/C/G and the counters in B/P/R), creating a superelliptical rhythm. Terminals are generally blunt with generous corner radii, and apertures tend to be relatively tight, giving the design a compact, engineered feel. The lowercase follows the same modular logic, with simple, sturdy shapes and a single-storey construction where applicable; numerals are equally boxy and uniform, suited to bold setting and clear silhouettes.
Best suited for display typography such as headlines, titles, posters, branding lockups, and packaging where a bold, geometric voice is desirable. The sturdy, high-impact shapes also fit UI overlays, game interfaces, scoreboards, and tech-themed graphics, particularly when set at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone reads modern and technical—clean, assertive, and slightly retro-futuristic. Its rounded-square geometry feels industrial yet friendly, evoking interfaces, hardware labeling, and arcade/sci‑fi visual culture rather than editorial or literary moods.
The font appears intended to deliver a durable, modern display sans with a rounded-square construction that stays consistent across letters and numbers. Its geometry prioritizes strong silhouettes and a controlled, modular feel, aiming for an unmistakably contemporary, tech-forward presence.
The design relies on a consistent corner radius and squared counters, which helps it maintain a coherent texture across mixed-case text. Some forms emphasize distinctive, logo-like silhouettes (especially in rounded-square letters and the angular diagonals), making it visually strong at larger sizes and in short bursts of copy.