Sans Superellipse Aksa 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka and 'PT Filter' by Paavola Type Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, signage, branding, headlines, packaging, tech, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, clean, modernization, system feel, clarity, geometric consistency, technical branding, rounded corners, squared curves, monoline, geometric, condensed feel.
A geometric sans with squared, superelliptical curves and consistently rounded corners. Strokes are largely monoline, with sturdy verticals and compact bowls that read like rounded rectangles rather than circles. Terminals tend to be flat and decisive, producing a crisp rhythm; counters are tight and evenly shaped, and curves join stems with minimal modulation. The uppercase feels engineered and stable, while the lowercase maintains a straightforward, functional structure with open apertures and compact widths.
Well-suited to UI and product environments where clarity and a technical voice are desired, including dashboards, app headers, and system-style labels. It also fits contemporary branding, packaging, and signage that benefits from geometric consistency and a compact, engineered look.
The overall tone is modern and technical, evoking interfaces, machinery labeling, and streamlined industrial design. Its rounded-square geometry softens the strictness just enough to feel approachable while staying firmly utilitarian and precise.
The design appears aimed at delivering a clean, contemporary sans that replaces circular geometry with rounded-rectangle structure for a more technical, device-forward personality. It prioritizes consistency across letters and numbers and a strong, legible texture in short to medium text settings.
Round characters like O/0 and D show a distinctive rounded-rectangle silhouette, and the numerals share the same squared-off curvature for a cohesive alphanumeric system. The forms hold up well in the sample text, keeping a consistent texture across mixed case, punctuation, and figures.