Sans Superellipse Akto 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Midsole' and 'Midsole SC' by Grype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, packaging, posters, headlines, tech, futuristic, clean, industrial, efficient, modernize, systematic, brandable, ui-friendly, distinctive geometry, rounded corners, modular, squared, geometric, compact.
A geometric sans built from squared, rounded-rectangle forms with consistently softened corners. Strokes are uniform and monolinear, with a mostly rectangular rhythm and occasional angled joins in letters like A, K, V, W, X, and Y. Curves are minimized in favor of superellipse-like counters and bowls, giving letters such as O, D, P, Q, and 0 a squarish, rounded silhouette. Terminals are predominantly flat and clipped, and spacing reads open and even, helping the design stay legible despite its stylized, modular construction.
Works best in display and short-to-medium text settings where its geometry can read as a design feature—app UI labels, dashboards, product packaging, tech branding, and modern signage. In larger sizes it delivers a crisp, engineered look for headlines and posters, while the open shapes and steady stroke weight help maintain clarity in functional labeling.
The overall tone feels technical and contemporary, with a mild sci‑fi and industrial flavor. Its rounded-square geometry suggests digital interfaces, hardware labeling, and engineered systems—clean and purposeful rather than expressive or warm.
The design appears intended to provide a modern, system-like sans with rounded-square forms that feel digital and constructed. It prioritizes consistency and a distinctive geometric voice over traditional grotesk neutrality, aiming for a recognizable, tech-forward texture in branding and interface contexts.
Several forms lean toward a modular, stencil-like efficiency: the G has an internal bar, the Q uses a short, angular tail, and the lowercase a is single-storey with a squared counter. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with a squared 0 and a simple, upright 1, reinforcing a consistent UI/wayfinding aesthetic.