Sans Superellipse Voko 8 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logos, ui, posters, futuristic, techno, space-age, sleek, clinical, modernity, tech branding, interface clarity, sci-fi styling, systematic geometry, rounded corners, squared curves, modular, geometric, streamlined.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like curves, combining flat horizontals/verticals with soft corners. Strokes are consistently even, with generous internal spacing and wide-set letterforms that create an open, airy rhythm. Many characters lean on squared bowls and pill-shaped counters (notably in O/Q/0 and lowercase rounded forms), while diagonals appear in select capitals like A, V, W, X, and Y for contrast. Terminals are generally blunt and clean, producing a crisp, engineered silhouette that stays legible at display sizes.
Best suited to display-forward work such as branding, product naming, posters, tech and game titles, and interface or dashboard typography where a clean, futuristic voice is desired. The wide proportions and open counters help it stay clear in short strings, labels, and large-scale headings, while the distinctive geometry can add character to minimal layouts.
The overall tone feels futuristic and technical, with a polished, instrument-panel clarity. Its rounded-square geometry reads modern and slightly sci‑fi, suggesting digital interfaces, mobility, and industrial design rather than editorial warmth or calligraphic personality.
The font appears designed to express a contemporary, engineered aesthetic through a consistent rounded-rect geometry and uniform stroke system. Its intent seems focused on delivering a recognizable techno voice with high clarity, leveraging wide spacing and simplified forms to stay clean and stable in modern digital contexts.
The design shows a strong preference for horizontal continuity and smooth cornering, giving many glyphs a track-like, segmented feel (e.g., E/S/2/3). Lowercase shapes echo the same squared-round logic as the capitals, maintaining a consistent system across the set. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect vocabulary, with closed, superelliptical forms where applicable and simplified angular construction on 4 and 7.