Sans Superellipse Dumit 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Revx Neue' and 'Revx Neue Rounded' by OneSevenPointFive (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, app interfaces, dashboards, wayfinding, product branding, clean, techy, friendly, neutral, modern, ui clarity, modern branding, digital-first, soft geometry, rounded corners, soft terminals, boxy rounds, open counters, geometric.
This typeface is a clean, monoline sans built from a rounded-rectangle/superellipse skeleton. Curves are squared-off and softened at the corners, giving round letters a subtly boxy footprint (notably in C, O, Q, and the numerals). Strokes remain even and calm, with mostly straight-sided verticals and broad, open counters; apertures in forms like C, S, and G stay generous for clarity. The lowercase is compact and highly legible with a prominent x-height, simple single-story a and g, and straightforward punctuation-like dots. Overall rhythm is orderly and contemporary, with slightly technical shaping balanced by softened terminals.
Well-suited to UI and product contexts where clarity and a contemporary voice are needed—navigation, settings, dashboards, and compact interface labels. It also works for brand systems and packaging that want a modern, mildly tech-forward feel without becoming sharp or aggressive, and it holds up neatly in short paragraphs and headings.
The tone feels modern and pragmatic, with a gentle friendliness coming from the rounded corners and smooth, unbroken stroke flow. Its squared curves suggest a digital/UI sensibility—precise and engineered—while staying approachable rather than sterile.
The design appears intended to merge geometric, screen-native construction with softened, human-friendly corners. Its consistent stroke weight and rounded-rect geometry aim for dependable legibility and a distinct modern identity across both display and text use.
Round letters tend toward squarish bowls, and joins are kept clean and uncluttered, which helps maintain consistent texture in paragraphs. Numerals follow the same softened-rectangle logic, reading crisp and stable at text sizes.