Sans Superellipse Onmir 7 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, game ui, posters, headlines, techy, futuristic, industrial, retro digital, utilitarian, systematic, modular, interface-ready, display clarity, rounded corners, rectilinear, geometric, squared, compact counters.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms with consistently thick, monoline strokes and squared terminals softened by generous corner radii. The letterforms favor straight verticals and horizontals with minimal diagonals, producing boxy bowls and counters; curves read as controlled arcs rather than fully circular. Overall proportions are broad and stable, with uniform character widths and a steady, grid-like rhythm in text. Distinctive details include simplified joins, clipped/stepped interior corners in places, and numeral shapes that echo the same rounded-rect geometry for strong visual consistency.
Well suited for interface labels, dashboards, and on-screen graphics where a structured, system-like voice is desired. It also works effectively in tech-forward branding, game UI, and short headlines or posters that benefit from a distinctive, modular geometric texture.
The design projects a clean, engineered feel—somewhere between sci‑fi interface lettering and retro computer/display typography. Its disciplined geometry and even spacing give it a functional, technical tone, while the rounded corners keep it approachable rather than harsh.
The font appears intended to deliver a futuristic, machine-made aesthetic through a strict rounded-rect geometry, consistent stroke weight, and uniform widths, prioritizing a tidy, grid-aligned presence in both glyph charts and running text.
The texture in paragraphs is highly regular due to uniform widths and consistent stroke weight, which makes patterns and repetition very prominent. The angular, squared construction increases character differentiation, especially in the numerals, and the overall look remains cohesive across caps, lowercase, and figures.