Sans Superellipse Agnep 4 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Bluteau Code' by DSType (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, terminal ui, data tables, technical docs, labels, technical, utilitarian, retro, clean, structured, clarity, alignment, system ui, functional modernism, digital heritage, squared-round, geometric, crisp, blunt, even rhythm.
A monospaced sans built from squared-round, superellipse-like shapes with consistently rounded corners and uniform stroke thickness. Curves are restrained and clean, while terminals are mostly flat and blunt, giving the letters a compact, engineered feel. Round characters like O/Q read as rounded rectangles, and diagonal forms (V, W, X, Y) are straight and stable, keeping the texture even across lines. The lowercase is simple and highly regular, with a single-storey a and g and minimal modulation, producing a steady, grid-friendly rhythm.
Well suited to code and command-line interfaces, where consistent character width supports alignment and scanning. It also works for tabular information, UI readouts, technical documentation, labeling, and any layout that benefits from a stable grid and predictable spacing.
The overall tone is practical and system-like, evoking tools, terminals, and early digital typography. Its squared curves and strict spacing lend a disciplined, no-nonsense personality that can also feel mildly retro in a computing or industrial way.
The design appears aimed at a modernized, screen-friendly monospaced voice with softened corners and strong geometric consistency. It prioritizes regularity and structured rhythm over expressive calligraphic detail, suggesting use in technical and interface contexts where clarity and alignment matter.
Counters tend to be boxy and open rather than fully circular, which reinforces the mechanical geometry. The uniform character width creates a pronounced vertical alignment in running text, and the rounded-square construction keeps the font from feeling harsh despite its rigid structure.