Sans Superellipse Okgoy 7 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka and 'Midsole' by Grype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, posters, headlines, packaging, techy, industrial, modern, friendly, interface clarity, industrial branding, systematic geometry, display impact, rounded, boxy, soft corners, sturdy, geometric.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms. Corners are consistently softened, terminals are mostly flat with rounded edges, and curves stay taut rather than fully circular. Proportions feel compact and engineered, with squared counters in letters like O and Q and a generally uniform, low-variation stroke presence. The overall rhythm is steady and blocky, with clear, open apertures and simplified, schematic shapes across both uppercase and lowercase.
It works well for interface typography, product labeling, and wayfinding where sturdy shapes and softened corners improve clarity at medium-to-large sizes. The strong, compact forms also suit headlines and brand marks that want a modern, technical character, and it can carry short passages or callouts where a clean, engineered texture is desired.
The tone is contemporary and utilitarian with a friendly edge from the rounded corners. It suggests digital interfaces, machinery labeling, and clean modern branding—confident and technical without feeling sharp or aggressive.
The design appears intended to merge industrial clarity with approachable geometry by using squared, superellipse-based construction and consistent corner rounding. It prioritizes a controlled, systematized look that remains readable and distinctive in display and UI contexts.
Distinctive squared-round numerals and the rectangular interior of the 0 reinforce an instrument-panel feel. The lowercase stays very geometric (single-storey forms where applicable), helping maintain a consistent, system-like texture in longer text.