Sans Superellipse Luni 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, pixel-art ui, headings, signage, dashboards, techy, retro, utilitarian, game-like, friendly, ui clarity, digital feel, grid logic, clean modularity, retro-tech, rounded, rectilinear, square, modular, geometric.
A rounded-rectangle, modular sans with consistently even stroke weight and generous corner radii. Letterforms are built from straight segments and soft 90° turns, producing squarish bowls and counters with a clean, engineered rhythm. Curves are minimized in favor of superelliptic geometry, giving figures and rounded letters a boxy, softened silhouette. Spacing is uniform and orderly, and punctuation like the i/j dots appear as solid circular points that echo the overall blunt, compact construction.
This design suits interface labels, dashboards, and on-screen readouts where a crisp, modular texture and predictable alignment are beneficial. It also works well for tech branding accents, poster headlines, and signage that want a clean, retro-digital atmosphere without sharp corners. In longer passages it creates a strong visual pattern, making it best as a display or UI text face rather than for continuous reading at small sizes.
The overall tone feels technical and system-like, with a subtle retro-digital flavor reminiscent of terminal, calculator, or early game UI typography. Rounded corners keep the hard geometry from feeling harsh, adding an approachable, modern-industrial friendliness. The regular, repeating shapes and consistent metrics convey precision and practicality rather than expressiveness.
The font appears intended to translate a grid-based, digital sensibility into smooth vector outlines: square construction, consistent strokes, and softened corners for legibility and a contemporary feel. It prioritizes uniform rhythm and clear alphanumeric differentiation for structured, interface-like typography.
Distinctive square-ish bowls in letters like O/D/P and the straight-sided construction in curves create a strong grid-based personality. Many forms favor open apertures and clear internal counters, supporting quick scanning in structured layouts. The numerals follow the same rounded-rectangular logic, reinforcing a cohesive, interface-oriented texture across mixed alphanumeric strings.