Sans Rounded Kivi 10 is a light, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, branding, game ui, album art, runic, mystical, hand-drawn, retro, whimsical, decorative display, fantasy tone, engraved feel, geometric character, angular, geometric, faceted, pointed, gothic-leaning.
A condensed, monoline display face built from simple straight strokes and softly rounded joins. Letterforms are tall and airy with frequent angled cuts, diamond-shaped counters, and occasional open forms that emphasize a faceted, carved look. Curves are minimal and treated as shallow bends rather than smooth bowls, giving the alphabet a crisp, constructed rhythm. Terminals tend to taper into points or short angled finishes, while the overall spacing and widths vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a hand-made, signlike feel.
Best suited to short headlines where its angular details and decorative counters can be appreciated—posters, title cards, book covers, game or fantasy-themed interfaces, and identity marks. It can work for brief pull quotes or packaging accents, but the stylization suggests avoiding long body copy or very small sizes where the thin strokes and open forms may lose clarity.
The overall tone reads occult-adjacent and storybook: part runic inscription, part mid‑century fantasy title lettering. Its sharp geometry and gemlike counters feel mysterious and ceremonial, while the thin, open construction keeps it light and playful rather than heavy or ominous.
The design appears intended as a characterful display sans that evokes engraved or runic lettering through tall proportions, faceted geometry, and gemlike counters, while keeping a clean monoline construction for modern legibility in headings.
Distinctive diamond forms appear in multiple characters (notably in O/0-like shapes), and several capitals rely on simplified, straight-sided structures that recall chiseled or engraved signage. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with especially stylized 2, 3, and 8 forms that read as decorative rather than utilitarian.