Sans Superellipse Ardaj 9 is a very light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, ui display, tech branding, posters, motion graphics, futuristic, technical, minimal, clean, sci-fi, geometric system, sci-fi display, interface clarity, modern minimalism, geometric, rounded, modular, open, austere.
A geometric monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) curves and straight segments, giving many letters a squarish, softly radiused silhouette. Strokes are extremely thin and consistent, with generous internal space and frequent open corners where curves transition into horizontals. Counters tend to be boxy and open, and several glyphs use simplified, modular construction (notably in the bowls and arches). Spacing in the samples reads airy, with a light, wireframe-like texture and clear separation between characters.
Best suited for display settings where its ultra-thin strokes and geometric structure can read cleanly—such as headlines, branding for technology products, UI/UX mockups, packaging accents, and motion graphics. It works particularly well when large, with ample tracking, or on high-contrast backgrounds where the delicate line weight won’t disappear.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, evoking interface typography, circuit-diagram clarity, and retro space-age signage. Its restrained geometry and ultra-thin lines feel precise and engineered rather than expressive or casual, producing a sleek, minimalist voice.
The design intention appears to be a contemporary, superellipse-driven sans that prioritizes a clean, modular construction and a distinctive rounded-rect geometry. It aims to communicate precision and modernity through simplified forms, consistent stroke behavior, and an airy, high-tech texture.
Round forms like O and 0 appear closely related in construction, with squared-off curvature; diagonals (e.g., K, V, X, Y) are thin and crisp, reinforcing a schematic feel. The lowercase set maintains the same modular logic as the uppercase, keeping a consistent, system-like rhythm across mixed-case text.