Sans Superellipse Amfe 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, reverse italic, tall x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Monospaceland' by Pepper Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, ui labels, posters, headlines, packaging, techy, retro, playful, utilitarian, quirky, system feel, retro tech, friendly geometry, distinctive slant, rounded, boxy, compressed curves, soft corners, slanted.
A rounded, boxy sans with a consistent monoline stroke and softened corners, built from superellipse-like curves and squared-off bowls. The letters lean backward, giving the set a distinctive slanted rhythm while keeping a steady, even color. Counters are open and geometric, terminals are blunt, and curves tend to resolve into flattened arcs rather than true circles. Proportions feel roomy horizontally with a tall lowercase presence, and the overall spacing behaves with a fixed, grid-like regularity.
Works well where a clean, geometric voice with a bit of personality is needed, such as code-oriented interfaces, UI labels, dashboards, and technical branding. Its steady rhythm and sturdy shapes also suit short headlines, posters, and packaging where a retro-tech mood is desirable.
The tone reads as technical and slightly retro, like terminal or instrument labeling with a friendlier, more playful edge. The backward slant and rounded-rectangle geometry add a quirky, futuristic feel without becoming decorative.
Likely designed to blend the strictness of fixed-width, system-like lettering with softer superellipse curves, creating a functional face that still feels distinctive. The reverse slant appears intended to differentiate the texture and add motion while maintaining clarity.
Distinctive rounded-rect forms show up strongly in O/0-like shapes, while straight stems and flat terminals keep the texture crisp. Numerals follow the same geometric logic, producing a cohesive, signage-like set.