Sans Superellipse Abnol 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Bakemono' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, terminal, data tables, labels, ui text, technical, utilitarian, clean, retro, friendly, alignment, clarity, ui utility, character distinction, modernize mono, square-rounded, geometric, open counters, compact joints, flat terminals.
A monospaced geometric sans with square-rounded construction and a distinctly superelliptical feel in bowls and curves. Strokes are low-contrast with mostly flat terminals and crisp joins, producing a sturdy, even rhythm across the set. Round letters like O/C/G read as rounded rectangles rather than true circles, while straight-sided forms (H, N, M) stay rigid and vertical. The lowercase is compact and highly regular, with single-storey a and g, a simple i with a round dot, and numerals that follow the same squared, modular logic.
Well-suited to code editors, command-line interfaces, and any setting that benefits from fixed-width alignment such as tables, logs, and forms. It also works for technical labeling, dashboards, and product UI where a neutral, orderly texture is preferred, and can add a subtle retro-computing character in branding accents or headings.
The tone is practical and engineering-minded, like tooling text or terminal UI typography, but softened by the rounded corners. Its even spacing and modular shapes give it a retro-computing flavor, while the clean geometry keeps it contemporary and approachable.
The font appears designed to deliver clear, consistent monospaced alignment while maintaining a modern geometric look. Rounded-rectangle curves and simplified lowercase forms suggest an intent to balance mechanical precision with approachable softness and strong character differentiation at small sizes.
The design emphasizes consistent widths and internal spacing, which makes the sample text read with a strong grid-like cadence. Several glyphs show intentional quirks typical of monospaced display—for example the angular diagonals in V/W/X/Y and the compact, squared curves in S and 2—helping characters stay distinguishable within fixed advance widths.