Sans Rounded Apgi 10 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logotypes, ui labels, headlines, posters, futuristic, techy, playful, clean, minimal, digital aesthetic, distinct identity, display clarity, soft modernity, rounded, modular, geometric, streamlined, soft corners.
A geometric sans built from even, monoline strokes with generously rounded terminals and corners. Many forms use open apertures and intentional breaks—especially in curved letters—creating a segmented, modular look while keeping overall shapes clear. Curves are broad and consistent, horizontals often appear as short bars, and the rhythm favors smooth, continuous motion over sharp angles. Uppercase proportions feel roomy and slightly extended, while the lowercase maintains a steady, modern structure; figures follow the same rounded-rectangle logic with simplified, open interiors.
Well-suited to branding, logotypes, packaging, and display settings where a modern, tech-leaning personality is desirable. It can work for UI labels and short interface text at comfortable sizes, and it performs especially well in headings, signage, and promotional graphics where its segmented details remain legible.
The overall tone reads futuristic and interface-driven, with a friendly, playful edge from the soft rounding and airy counters. The recurring gaps and bar-like strokes suggest digital displays, sci‑fi labeling, and streamlined product aesthetics rather than traditional editorial typography.
The design appears intended to merge a clean geometric sans foundation with a distinctive, display-oriented motif of open cuts and rounded modular strokes. It prioritizes a contemporary, digital feel and strong visual identity while maintaining consistent construction across letters and numbers.
Distinctive split-stroke details show up repeatedly in letters like C/G/O/Q as small interruptions that become a signature motif. The joins and terminals are highly consistent, producing a tidy texture in words, though the decorative breaks make the design more characterful than a neutral workhorse sans.