Sans Superellipse Otbul 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Regio Mono' by Degarism Studio, 'EF Thordis Mono' by Elsner+Flake, 'Consolas' by Microsoft Corporation, and 'Bale Mono' by moretype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, ui labels, data tables, terminals, technical docs, technical, utilitarian, clean, modern, friendly, legibility, system ui, alignment, neutrality, clarity, boxy, rounded, geometric, robust, crisp.
A clean, monoline sans with wide proportions and rounded-rectangle (superellipse) shaping in the curves. Corners are softly radiused while verticals and horizontals stay straight and firm, producing a sturdy, engineered rhythm. Rounds like C, G, O, and e read as squarish ovals, and the overall color is even and steady with minimal stroke modulation. The tall x-height and open apertures keep counters clear, while uniform character widths create a consistent grid-like cadence in text.
Well-suited to interfaces and settings where alignment and scanning matter, such as code views, terminal-style displays, tables, and dashboards. It also works for concise UI labels, product specs, and technical documentation where a steady rhythm and clear forms improve readability.
The tone is pragmatic and contemporary, balancing a mechanical, system-like order with approachable rounded details. It feels dependable and workmanlike rather than expressive, with a subtle friendliness coming from the softened corners and generous interior space.
Likely designed to provide a neutral, highly legible workhorse face with disciplined spacing and a modern geometric flavor. The softened superellipse curves suggest an intent to make an efficient, system-friendly style feel less harsh while preserving clarity and consistency.
In running text, the consistent width and even spacing create a strong vertical alignment that emphasizes structure and regularity. Numerals appear straightforward and legible, matching the same rounded-rect geometry as the letters.