Sans Superellipse Pyguv 5 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Bluset EF' and 'Bluset EF Pro' by Elsner+Flake (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, terminal, ui labels, tables, forms, utilitarian, technical, retro, clean, no-nonsense, alignment, legibility, space-saving, screen use, geometric, compact, rounded, boxy, uniform.
A compact monospaced sans with a squared, superellipse construction: curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls, and straight stems stay consistently even. Terminals are mostly blunt and flat, with minimal modulation, producing a steady rhythm and predictable spacing. Counters are relatively small and controlled, and joints favor simple, engineered geometry over calligraphic nuance, keeping the overall texture crisp and orderly.
Well-suited to code, terminal output, and any interface context that benefits from strict character alignment such as tables, logs, and data displays. Its compact footprint and even texture also fit captions, labels, and technical documentation where space efficiency and predictable spacing matter.
The overall tone feels pragmatic and tool-like, with a lightly retro, terminal-style flavor. Its restrained shapes and consistent cell width suggest precision and clarity rather than personality-driven expressiveness, making it read as dependable and technical.
The design appears intended for disciplined, grid-based typography where uniform widths and robust, simplified shapes support fast scanning and reliable alignment. The rounded-rectangle geometry suggests a deliberate nod to screen- and device-oriented lettering while keeping the forms neutral and workmanlike.
Round letters (like O/C) appear more squarish than circular, reinforcing a mechanical, grid-friendly silhouette. The lowercase set stays straightforward and legible, with simple single-storey forms and compact apertures that maintain a dense, even typographic color.