Sans Superellipse Okkik 8 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, packaging, posters, tech branding, technical, retro, utilitarian, friendly, geometric clarity, system feel, softened tech, distinctive numerals, rounded corners, squared curves, soft geometry, industrial.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke thickness. Curves tend to resolve into squarer bowls and counters, giving letters like O, C, and G a chamfered, rounded-rect silhouette rather than a perfect circle. Terminals are predominantly blunt and rounded, and joins stay clean and mechanical, producing a steady, modular rhythm. The lowercase maintains open, simple constructions with minimal contrast, and the numerals follow the same boxy-rounded logic for a coherent alphanumeric texture.
This style suits UI labels, dashboards, and product interfaces where a clean, engineered look is desired without sharp, aggressive corners. It also performs well for signage, packaging, and posters that benefit from a geometric, slightly retro technical aesthetic and consistent, orderly rhythm.
The overall tone reads technical and pragmatic, with a subtle retro-digital flavor. Rounded corners temper the geometry, keeping the voice approachable rather than severe, while the squared curves and consistent strokes suggest engineered precision.
The design appears intended to merge a modern geometric sans structure with softened, superellipse-based geometry, creating a utilitarian face that feels both precise and approachable. Its consistent stroke behavior and squared-rounded forms prioritize a distinctive, system-like presence across letters and numbers.
The set emphasizes clear, high-contrast silhouettes created by squared bowls and generous rounding, which helps maintain character distinction in compact settings. The sample text shows an even, steady color across lines, with a slightly modular cadence that feels at home in interface-like layouts.