Sans Superellipse Onrom 4 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, ui display, gaming, tech, industrial, futuristic, clean, confident, sci-fi branding, interface voice, geometric consistency, high impact, rounded corners, squared curves, boxy, stencil-like apertures, modular.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse primitives, with broad curves, squared counters, and consistently rounded corners. Strokes are uniform and heavy, producing a high-impact silhouette with minimal contrast. Many letters use clipped joins and open terminals that create compact, stencil-like breaks, while bowls and counters stay rectilinear and softly radiused. Spacing and proportions feel tightly engineered, with a forward, modular rhythm that remains legible in short text despite the dense weight.
Best suited to titles, logos, packaging, and poster typography where its geometric construction and dense strokes can carry visual weight. It can also work for UI headings, dashboards, and game/interface graphics that benefit from a futuristic, modular voice. For longer passages, it will perform best at comfortable sizes with generous line spacing to offset its compact internal openings.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a controlled, engineered feel reminiscent of sci‑fi interfaces and industrial labeling. Rounded corners soften the geometry, keeping it approachable while still reading as precise and utilitarian. The distinctive cut-ins and squared counters add a slightly retro-digital flavor without becoming ornamental.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, tech-forward sans with superelliptical geometry and a strong, consistent rhythm. By combining rounded corners with squared counters and strategic cut-ins, it aims to feel engineered and modern while maintaining clear, repeatable shapes across letters and numerals.
Uppercase forms are especially structured and box-driven, while lowercase retains the same geometry with simplified, compact joins (notably in multi-stem letters). Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic and appear designed for consistency with caps, with angular diagonals and squared interiors giving a strong display presence.