Sans Superellipse Pygir 14 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Allotrope' by Kostic, 'Prelo Condensed' by Monotype, and 'Akwe Pro' by ROHH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, product design, wayfinding, branding, editorial, modern, neutral, clean, friendly, technical, system clarity, geometric identity, everyday readability, modern branding, rounded, soft corners, open apertures, compact curves, straight-sided.
This typeface presents a clean sans with a distinctly rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction: bowls and counters feel squarish-rounded rather than purely circular. Strokes are even and steady with minimal modulation, and terminals are crisp, producing a tidy, contemporary texture. Proportions are practical and readable, with generous interior space in letters like a, e, and s, and a clear, straightforward numeral set. Overall spacing and rhythm read orderly and consistent, supporting continuous text without looking rigid.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and product experiences where clarity and a contemporary voice are needed. It also works for branding systems and packaging that benefit from geometric softness, and for editorial subheads or pull quotes where a clean, organized texture is desirable.
The tone is modern and matter-of-fact with a subtle friendliness from the softened curves. Its geometric underpinning and squared rounds give it a slightly technical, product-oriented feel while remaining approachable for everyday communication.
The design appears intended to blend pragmatic readability with a distinctive superelliptical geometry, offering a modern alternative to purely circular geometric sans. It aims for a consistent, system-ready appearance across letters and numbers while staying visually warm through rounded forms.
The uppercase shows restrained geometry with rounded corners and confident verticals, while the lowercase maintains open shapes that help recognition at smaller sizes. The digit design matches the same squarish-rounded logic, keeping UI-style consistency across alphanumerics.