Sans Superellipse Jidas 1 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, techno, industrial, futuristic, assertive, retro digital, impact, compactness, tech aesthetic, geometric consistency, squared, rounded corners, blocky, compact, high contrast (mass).
A compact, heavy sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with squared bowls and softened corners throughout. Strokes are consistently thick with little modulation, and counters are tight and mostly rectangular, creating a strong, uniform color in text. Curves are minimized in favor of superelliptical turns; terminals are blunt and clean, and joins tend to be right-angled with subtle rounding. The overall rhythm is condensed and vertical, with short apertures and sturdy, stacked proportions that keep letterforms dense and punchy.
Works well for headlines, posters, and prominent UI or signage where a compact, high-impact sans is needed. It’s a strong choice for branding and logos in tech, industrial, gaming, or sci‑fi themed contexts, and for packaging or labels that benefit from dense, sturdy letterforms.
The font conveys a mechanical, techno-forward tone with a hint of retro display lettering. Its dense black shapes and squared rounding feel utilitarian and engineered, projecting confidence and urgency. The overall impression is bold and modernist, suited to settings that want a controlled, high-impact voice rather than softness or refinement.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rectangle construction into a forceful display voice, prioritizing strong silhouette, consistency, and a compact footprint. Its restrained detailing and tight counters suggest a goal of delivering maximum visual impact with a clean, engineered aesthetic.
Uppercase forms read especially rigid and architectural, while lowercase keeps the same square logic with compact bowls and minimal curvature. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle construction, maintaining strong consistency across the set. The tight counters and blocky shapes suggest best performance at display sizes or in short bursts of text where impact matters more than airy readability.