Sans Superellipse Abgil 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Amino' by Cadson Demak; 'Faculty' by Device; 'Movida' by ROHH; 'Core Sans N' and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core; and 'Amsi Pro', 'Amsi Pro AKS', and 'Sans Beam' by Stawix (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, app design, web headings, brand identity, packaging, friendly, modern, clean, approachable, pragmatic, humanized geometry, everyday readability, modern branding, interface clarity, rounded, soft, geometric, neutral, compact.
A rounded, geometric sans with superelliptical curves and squared-off terminals softened by generous corner radii. Strokes are even and calm, producing a steady texture, while counters tend toward rounded-rect shapes that keep forms open and legible. Proportions lean compact in the curves (notably in bowls and rounds), with straight-sided stems and simple, unembellished joins; diagonals (V, W, X) are slightly softened to match the overall curvature. Figures are straightforward and readable, with the same rounded-rectangle logic applied consistently across the set.
Well-suited for user interfaces, product UI labeling, and web typography where clarity and a friendly voice are needed. It also performs effectively in short headlines, branding, and packaging systems that benefit from a clean geometric impression with softened edges.
The tone is modern and friendly, with a utilitarian clarity that still feels warm due to the softened corners. It reads as approachable and contemporary rather than technical or formal, suitable for brands and interfaces that want a clean look without sharpness.
Likely designed to blend geometric order with approachable softness, using superelliptical shaping to create a distinctive yet highly readable sans. The consistent rounding and restrained details suggest an intent to serve as a versatile workhorse for contemporary digital and brand environments.
The rounded-square construction is especially evident in O/Q and the bowls of B/P/R, giving the type a cohesive “soft geometry.” The lowercase shows simplified, sturdy forms (single-storey a and g), and the punctuation/dots appear distinctly round against the softened-rect letterforms, adding a crisp rhythm in text.