Sans Superellipse Pokiv 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, packaging, posters, headlines, techy, modern, clean, industrial, retro-futurist, space-saving, systematic, modernization, technical clarity, distinctive geometry, rounded, condensed, monoline, geometric, squared.
A condensed sans with monoline strokes and a pronounced rounded-rectangle (superelliptical) construction. Corners are consistently softened, producing boxy bowls and counters in letters like O, D, and P, while terminals tend to be flat and squared rather than tapered. Curves are controlled and slightly squarish, with compact apertures and a tight, efficient rhythm; numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, staying tall and space-conscious. Overall spacing and proportions feel engineered, prioritizing uniformity and vertical economy over calligraphic modulation.
It works well for interface labels, dashboards, and product or technical labeling where space is limited and a clean, systematic look is desired. The condensed build also suits posters, headlines, and branding applications that benefit from a compact, contemporary voice and strong vertical presence.
The tone is modern and utilitarian with a subtle retro-tech flavor, like labeling on devices or transportation systems. Its rounded corners keep it approachable, but the condensed, squared geometry reads precise and functional. The result feels confident, orderly, and purpose-built.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-saving sans with a distinctive superelliptical skeleton—square-leaning forms softened by rounded corners—to feel both engineered and friendly. Its consistent geometry suggests an aim for clear, repeatable shapes suited to modern systems and display-driven typography.
The font’s distinctive identity comes from the tension between strict, nearly rectangular curves and softly rounded corners, which creates a consistent “capsule” silhouette across many glyphs. The condensed set width and compact internal spaces can amplify density in longer text, while remaining crisp at display sizes.