Sans Superellipse Hakam 7 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Proto Mono' by ATK Studio and 'Archimoto V01' by Owl king project (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, dashboards, packaging, posters, labels, techy, industrial, retro, utilitarian, mechanical, system feel, technical voice, signage clarity, retro computing, rounded corners, squared curves, chamfered joins, stencil-like, pixel-adjacent.
A heavy, monoline sans built from squared geometry with rounded-rectangle bowls and frequent chamfered corners. Curves resolve into superellipse-like shapes, giving O/C/G and the lowercase rounds a compact, machined feel rather than a fully circular one. Terminals are typically flat and orthogonal, with occasional clipped diagonals that add a technical, fabricated rhythm. Spacing and proportions read intentionally uniform, and the overall color on the page is dark and steady, with minimal stroke contrast and crisp interior counters.
Works well for interface elements, dashboards, and technical documentation where uniform rhythm and high, blocky presence are desirable. The strong, squared-round silhouettes also suit posters, packaging, and labeling that aims for a utilitarian or retro-tech aesthetic, especially at medium to large sizes.
The tone is pragmatic and engineered—evoking device labeling, early computer/terminal typography, and industrial signage. Its rounded-square construction softens the severity of the geometry, keeping the voice friendly enough for contemporary UI while still feeling mechanical and purposeful.
Likely designed to translate a rounded-rectangle, machine-made geometry into a robust text face that remains consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals. The clipped details and flat terminals suggest an intention to feel engineered and display-ready while preserving a straightforward, system-oriented texture in paragraphs.
Distinctive cuts and notches appear in several forms (notably in some diagonals and joins), creating a subtle stencil/engraved impression without fully breaking strokes. Numerals and capitals maintain the same squared-round logic, reinforcing a consistent, system-like texture in running text.