Sans Superellipse Pokim 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: signage, posters, headlines, ui labels, packaging, utilitarian, retro-futurist, technical, modular, industrial, space saving, systemic clarity, industrial tone, modern signage, modular geometry, condensed, rounded corners, tall, monolinear, squared curves.
A tall, condensed sans with squared, superelliptic curves and consistently rounded corners. Strokes read largely monolinear, with clean joins and terminals that alternate between flat cuts and softly radiused ends, producing a crisp but friendly texture. Counters are compact and rectangular-leaning, and several forms (notably bowls and rounded letters) feel built from rounded rectangles rather than pure circles. The overall rhythm is tight and vertical, with clear, simplified shapes designed for uniformity across the set.
Well-suited to space-conscious applications where a strong vertical presence is helpful, such as signage, wayfinding-style graphics, and condensed headlines. The squared curves and rounded corners also fit UI labels, dashboards, and product/packaging typography that benefits from a technical yet approachable aesthetic. It performs best at medium to large sizes where the compact counters remain clear.
The tone is technical and slightly retro, evoking industrial labeling, transit or equipment typography, and modernist condensed display faces. Rounded corners keep it approachable, while the narrow proportions and modular geometry give it a purposeful, engineered feel. In text, it reads as brisk and efficient, with a controlled, system-like character.
The design appears intended to deliver a condensed, systematized sans built from rounded-rect geometry—prioritizing compact width, consistent construction, and a clean industrial voice. Its simplified, modular shapes suggest an emphasis on reproducibility and clear identification in display and labeling contexts.
The figures follow the same condensed, squared-curve logic as the letters, with an oval-rectangular 0 and compact, upright numerals suited to tabular-looking settings. Uppercase forms maintain strong vertical emphasis, and lowercase keeps a straightforward, utilitarian construction with minimal calligraphic influence, supporting a consistent, signage-oriented voice.