Sans Rounded Byso 1 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logotypes, headlines, ui labels, posters, futuristic, tech, space-age, playful, clean, futurism, modernism, interface feel, display impact, brand distinctiveness, rounded, geometric, streamlined, soft-cornered, high-contrast-free.
A rounded, geometric sans with smooth, monoline strokes and generously radiused corners throughout. Forms lean on squarish bowls and capsule-like horizontals, with open apertures and simplified inner counters that keep the texture clean at larger sizes. Curves connect with soft, continuous transitions, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y, K) stay crisp and symmetrical, reinforcing a constructed, engineered feel. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with an especially boxy, modern “0” and evenly weighted “8” and “9.”
This font is well suited to contemporary branding, logotypes, and headline systems where a futuristic but friendly voice is desired. It also works nicely for UI labels, dashboards, and motion/overlay graphics thanks to its simplified, rounded construction and even stroke presence. For long-form text, it’s best used sparingly or at comfortable sizes where the stylization can breathe.
The overall tone is modern and space-age, evoking sci‑fi interfaces and product design graphics rather than traditional editorial typography. Rounded terminals and modular geometry give it a friendly, approachable edge, so it reads as tech-forward without feeling harsh.
The letterforms appear designed to communicate a sleek, modern identity through consistent rounding and modular geometry, prioritizing a cohesive, tech-oriented silhouette. Its construction suggests an emphasis on recognizability and stylistic unity across caps, lowercase, and figures for display-driven typography.
The design’s signature is its consistent corner radius and squircle-like bowls, which creates a distinctive, glossy UI rhythm. The wide stance and open spacing in the sample text help preserve clarity, though the stylized construction favors display settings over dense, small-size reading.