Sans Superellipse Dumit 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code ui, terminals, dashboards, data tables, labels, technical, minimal, utilitarian, retro-digital, neutral, clarity, ui utility, grid alignment, neutrality, technical labeling, rounded corners, squared curves, crisp, system-like, modular.
A monolinear sans built from squared curves and rounded-rectangle geometry, producing superellipse-like bowls and soft corners throughout. Strokes are even and mechanically consistent, with blunt terminals and simple joins that keep silhouettes clean and modular. Curved letters (C, O, S, G) read as rounded boxes rather than true circles, while diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y) stay straight and rigid against the otherwise softened forms. Punctuation and figures follow the same disciplined construction, and overall spacing feels measured and grid-friendly.
Well suited to settings that benefit from strict alignment and predictable spacing, such as coding environments, terminal-style interfaces, data-heavy UI, tables, technical documentation, and product labeling. It also works for compact captions and interface copy where a clean, grid-oriented texture is desirable.
The tone is functional and instrument-like: calm, technical, and deliberately plain. Its rounded corners add a gentle friendliness, but the overall impression remains controlled and utilitarian, reminiscent of device interfaces and engineered labeling rather than editorial expressiveness.
The design appears intended to deliver a practical, highly consistent monospace voice with softened, rounded-rectangle forms for improved approachability. Its geometry and uniform stroke behavior suggest a focus on clarity, repeatable shapes, and reliable rhythm in screen-forward and system-like contexts.
Distinctive details include squared, rounded bowls (notably in O/0 and C), a compact, constructed feel in counters, and numerals that prioritize clarity over ornament. The sample text shows consistent rhythm and alignment suited to structured content where uniform character widths matter.