Sans Rounded Bime 6 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui labels, packaging, futuristic, tech, arcade, space-age, industrial, tech styling, display impact, modular consistency, brand distinctiveness, rounded corners, geometric, modular, soft square, extended.
A wide, monoline display sans built from soft-rectangular strokes with consistently rounded corners. Counters and apertures favor squared-off, capsule-like shapes, giving the alphabet a modular, engineered feel while keeping edges friendly. The rhythm is horizontal and spacious, with many letters emphasizing long top and bottom bars; joins are clean and uniform, and diagonals (as in V, W, X, Y) are simplified into broad, controlled angles. Figures echo the same rounded-rectangle construction, with a distinctive, segmented look in forms like 2, 3, and 5 and a squared, open interior in 0.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where its wide footprint and modular detailing can read as intentional design—headlines, titles, esports/tech branding, packaging, and UI or device-style labeling. It can also work for subheads and pull quotes when given generous tracking and line spacing to preserve clarity at smaller sizes.
The overall tone reads futuristic and interface-driven, reminiscent of sci‑fi labeling, arcade titles, and tech product branding. Its softened corners temper the mechanical geometry, producing a sleek but approachable voice that feels modern and synthetic rather than humanist.
The font appears intended as a futuristic rounded display sans that prioritizes a consistent, modular construction and strong horizontal presence. Its geometry and softened corners suggest a goal of combining techno aesthetics with approachable legibility for contemporary branding and interface-oriented design.
The design leans on a small set of repeated shapes—rounded terminals, squared counters, and extended horizontals—which creates strong stylistic cohesion across caps, lowercase, and numerals. Several letters use unconventional constructions (notably G, Q, and the segmented E/S forms), reinforcing a display-first personality and a distinctive, logo-friendly silhouette.