Sans Superellipse Rurel 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, product design, wayfinding, dashboards, packaging, clean, modern, friendly, neutral, techy, clarity, modernization, systematic, approachability, efficiency, rounded corners, soft terminals, geometric, monolinear, open apertures.
A crisp geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle logic: bowls and counters read as superelliptical, with squared-off curves softened by generous corner rounding. Strokes are largely uniform with subtle modulation, giving a steady rhythm and even color in text. Terminals tend to be clean and slightly softened rather than sharply cut, and curves resolve into straight segments in places, producing a tidy, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are simple and compact, while lowercase maintains clear differentiation (notably in forms like a, g, and q) and keeps counters open for legibility.
This face suits UI copy, product interfaces, and information-heavy layouts where steady spacing and clear, open forms help scanning. It also works well for signage and wayfinding at medium sizes, and for modern branding or packaging that benefits from a clean, softly geometric voice.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable—clinical enough for interface work, but softened by rounded corners that add warmth. It suggests practicality and clarity rather than expressiveness, with a quiet, modern-tech character that stays out of the way in running text.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly legible, modern sans with a distinctive superelliptical geometry—balancing a rational, grid-based construction with softened corners to avoid harshness. It prioritizes clarity, consistency, and a contemporary aesthetic that performs reliably across headings and text.
The rounded-rectangle construction is especially apparent in the O/0-like shapes and in letters with bowls, where the curvature feels squarish rather than purely circular. Figures appear straightforward and readable, matching the typeface’s consistent, system-like rhythm.