Sans Superellipse Usro 4 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, app design, wayfinding, product branding, headlines, tech, futuristic, clean, sturdy, neutral, geometric clarity, system consistency, modern branding, screen readability, rounded, square-ish, geometric, monolinear, compact curves.
A rounded, square-leaning sans with monolinear strokes and corners softened into superellipse-like curves. Bowls and counters tend toward rounded rectangles rather than pure circles, giving letters a compact, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are broad and stable with straight-sided construction (notably in E/F/L/T), while round letters like O/C/G keep a flattened, squarish curvature. Lowercase is simple and geometric with single-storey a and g, a short-armed t, and a utilitarian, minimal-curve r; apertures are moderately open and terminals are clean and unadorned. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with a straight-backed 2 and a compact, stacked 8 that maintains the squared-round rhythm.
Well-suited to interfaces, dashboards, product labeling, and contemporary brand systems where clean geometry and quick recognition matter. Its sturdy shapes and squared-round curves also lend themselves to headlines, signage, and short-to-medium text in modern layouts.
The overall tone is contemporary and technical, with a controlled, device-friendly geometry that reads as modern and systematic rather than humanist. The softened corners keep it approachable, but the squared curves and firm horizontals preserve a utilitarian, engineered character.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with softened, superelliptical rounding for a modern sans that feels both technical and friendly. By standardizing corner radii and relying on rounded-rect proportions, it aims for a consistent, system-like voice that stays legible and distinctive in digital and environmental applications.
Spacing appears even and the design maintains a consistent corner radius and stroke logic across capitals, lowercase, and figures, reinforcing a cohesive, modular rhythm. The squared curvature can make round letters feel compact and space-efficient, especially in dense settings.