Sans Superellipse Omgad 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Directory Board JNL' by Jeff Levine, 'Evanston Tavern' by Kimmy Design, and 'Gemsbuck Pro' by Studio Fat Cat (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, app design, branding, headlines, signage, modern, utilitarian, technical, clean, friendly, clarity, systematic design, modern utility, distinct geometry, rounded, squared, geometric, compact, sturdy.
A geometric sans with superellipse-inspired construction: round forms read as rounded rectangles with consistent corner radii, producing a squared-yet-soft silhouette. Strokes are even and monoline, with largely uniform joins and terminals that feel blunt rather than tapered. Proportions are compact and efficient, with tight counters and a controlled rhythm that keeps letters crisp at display sizes. Lowercase forms echo the same squared-round logic, and numerals follow the set’s robust, simplified geometry for clear, consistent texture.
This font suits interface typography, dashboards, and product labeling where clarity and a compact footprint are helpful. Its sturdy shapes also work well for contemporary branding and short headlines, and the rounded-squared geometry can carry nicely into signage and wayfinding-style applications.
The overall tone is modern and matter-of-fact, balancing a technical, engineered feel with approachable rounded corners. It suggests contemporary UI and product design aesthetics—clean, efficient, and slightly friendly rather than cold.
The design appears intended to deliver a pragmatic geometric sans that reads cleanly while standing out through rounded-rectangle curves. The consistent superellipse logic and restrained detailing suggest an emphasis on systematic construction, legibility, and a contemporary industrial character.
Several glyphs emphasize squared curves and shallow bowls, giving the type a distinctly structured texture in text. The set maintains a consistent corner language across curves and straight strokes, which helps headings and labels look cohesive in mixed-case settings.