Sans Superellipse Gugoj 7 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Realtime' and 'Realtime Rounded' by Juri Zaech and 'Harmonia Sans' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, terminals, labels, badges, packaging, industrial, utilitarian, technical, sturdy, modern, legibility, system ui, data display, signage, rounded corners, square forms, boxy, high contrast spacing, clean terminals.
A compact, heavy sans with monoline strokes and a strongly squared construction softened by rounded corners. Curves resolve into superellipse-like bowls, giving O/C/G and the numerals a rounded-rectangle feel rather than a purely circular one. Terminals are clean and mostly horizontal/vertical, with minimal modulation and consistent stroke weight; counters are relatively tight, contributing to a dense, solid texture in text. The lowercase is straightforward and functional, with a single-storey a and g, short, blocky joins, and simple punctuation that matches the geometric rhythm.
Works well for code-like UI, terminals, and dashboards where uniform character spacing and sturdy shapes are beneficial. It also suits labels, equipment markings, badges, and compact headlines that need a tough, legible voice with a geometric, rounded-square flavor.
The overall tone is practical and engineered: confident, no-nonsense, and slightly retro-tech. Its rounded-square geometry reads as industrial signage or hardware labeling—friendly enough to feel approachable, but primarily built for clarity and robustness.
Likely designed to deliver a dependable, uniform reading rhythm with a distinctly squared, rounded-corner geometry—combining the clarity of a workhorse sans with the practical constraints and visual order of fixed-width typography.
The design’s squarish bowls and wide, flat shoulders create a steady cadence across lines, while the generous sidebearings typical of fixed-width rhythms keep characters evenly separated. Numerals are similarly squared and weighty, pairing well with all-caps settings and data-like strings.