Sans Superellipse Vubi 3 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, ui titles, futuristic, tech, clean, confident, industrial, systematic geometry, modern branding, tech aesthetic, display impact, rounded, squared, geometric, streamlined, modular.
A geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction throughout, combining broad proportions with smooth, squared curves. Strokes are consistently heavy and even, with soft corners and generous internal counters that keep forms open at display sizes. The rhythm is driven by wide bowls and straight-sided curves (notably in C/O/Q), while diagonals (A/K/V/W/X/Y) are clean and sharply joined for a crisp, engineered feel. Numerals follow the same superelliptical logic, with a boxy 0 and segmented, horizontal emphasis in several figures.
Best suited for headlines, branding marks, and short bursts of text where its wide stance and rounded-rect geometry can be appreciated. It works well in tech-oriented packaging, product identities, posters, and UI/header typography, especially when a clean futuristic tone is desired. For longer reading, it will be most effective at larger sizes with comfortable spacing.
The overall tone reads modern and machine-made: sleek, purposeful, and slightly retro-futuristic. Rounded corners temper the weight, giving it an approachable, consumer-electronics vibe rather than an aggressive industrial one. It feels confident and technical, suited to interfaces, product branding, and sci‑fi leaning visuals.
The letterforms appear designed to express a cohesive rounded-rectangular system that feels contemporary and engineered. The intention seems to balance strong display impact with friendly, softened corners, creating a distinctive tech-forward identity without sharp or brittle edges.
The design favors horizontal flow with wide letters and compact joins, creating a strong, stable baseline presence. Distinctive details include the rectangular counters and the consistent rounding that unifies both uppercase and lowercase; the lowercase maintains a single-storey construction where applicable, reinforcing the geometric system.