Sans Superellipse Ofdah 9 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Allrounder Grotesk Mono' by Identity Letters, 'Ki' by Mint Type, 'Monoplan' by Plantype, and 'Fonetika Mono' by Tokotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, packaging, signage, data tables, code samples, utilitarian, technical, friendly, retro, clean, clarity, consistency, robustness, approachability, system use, rounded, soft corners, rectilinear, geometric, sturdy.
A sturdy rounded sans built from squarish, superellipse-like curves and rounded-rectangle counters. Strokes are uniform and heavy, with softened terminals and corners that keep the overall texture smooth rather than sharp. Curves on letters like C, G, O, and S feel boxy-rounded, while straight-sided forms (E, F, H, N) maintain a clean, mechanical rhythm. The lowercase shows simple, compact constructions with a single-storey a and g and minimal modulation, producing an even, dense color in text.
This style suits interface typography, dashboards, and labeling where a sturdy, highly regular texture helps scanning. It also works well for packaging, wayfinding, and product graphics that benefit from rounded, industrial clarity, and it can be effective in technical documentation or code-adjacent settings where aligned characters and consistent widths support structure.
The tone reads practical and approachable: technical enough for UI or labeling, but softened by the rounded geometry. Its squared curves and consistent rhythm also evoke a subtle retro-computing and industrial-signage feel without becoming decorative.
The design appears intended to deliver a robust, highly consistent sans with rounded-rectangle geometry for clear, repeatable shapes. The softened corners and simplified letter constructions suggest a focus on pragmatic legibility while keeping a friendly, contemporary-industrial character.
Figures are straightforward and legible, with the 0 drawn with an internal mark for differentiation. The overall design emphasizes consistency across glyphs, with rounded joins that reduce visual noise and keep repeated letterforms uniform in longer passages.