Sans Superellipse Okbiz 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Murat Grotesque' by Bülent Yüksel (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, signage, packaging, modern, technical, clean, condensed, streamlined, space saving, modernization, geometric clarity, system design, rounded, squared, monoline, geometric, industrial.
A condensed, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superelliptical curves. Strokes stay even and crisp, with corners softened into consistent radii that create a smooth, squared-round silhouette across bowls and counters. The vertical rhythm is strong and upright, with tight sidebearings and compact apertures that keep words dense while still legible. Uppercase forms are narrow and disciplined; lowercase follows the same narrow logic with tall proportions and simplified joins, producing an efficient, engineered texture in paragraphs.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium text where a compact footprint is beneficial: headlines, posters, packaging, and contemporary brand systems. The narrow build and uniform stroke also make it a strong candidate for signage and interface-style typographic treatments where space efficiency and a modern, engineered feel are desired.
The overall tone feels contemporary and utilitarian—sleek, orderly, and slightly futuristic. Its rounded-square geometry suggests a tech-forward, systemized personality rather than a humanist or calligraphic one, lending an industrial clarity to headlines and UI-like settings.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-saving sans with a distinctive rounded-rect geometry—combining the economy of condensed proportions with a softened, modern edge for contemporary branding and editorial display.
Round letters like O and 0 read as superelliptical rather than purely circular, and many terminals are cleanly squared with softened edges, reinforcing a modular, designed-by-geometry impression. The numeral set appears consistent in stroke and proportion, matching the condensed cadence of the letters for tight, information-rich layouts.