Sans Superellipse Pykoz 11 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Brainy Variable Sans' by Maculinc (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, wayfinding, packaging, data tables, posters, clean, modern, utilitarian, technical, neutral, space saving, clarity, modern utility, systematic design, condensed, rounded corners, open apertures, geometric, minimal.
A compact, condensed sans with monoline strokes and gently squared curves that read as superellipse-like rounds rather than perfect circles. Terminals are clean and mostly square-cut, with subtly softened corners on curved letters. Proportions are tall with tight inner counters; round letters like O and C feel slightly rectangular, while straight-sided forms (H, N, E) keep a crisp, engineered rhythm. Numerals are similarly narrow and linear, with simple construction and consistent stroke texture across the set.
Well suited to interfaces, dashboards, and product labeling where compact width and clear shapes help conserve space. It can also work for headlines and posters that want a sleek, modern voice, and for wayfinding or informational text when set with comfortable tracking and line spacing.
The overall tone is neutral and contemporary, with a slightly technical, space-efficient feel. Rounded-rectangle curves keep it friendly enough for UI and labeling, while the condensed stance and crisp joins lean practical and no-nonsense.
The design appears aimed at an efficient, contemporary sans for space-conscious typography, combining condensed proportions with rounded-rectangular geometry to maintain clarity and a controlled, modern texture.
Curves appear controlled and systematic, giving the alphabet a consistent, modular look. Spacing in the sample text suggests it’s designed to remain readable at small to medium sizes while fitting more characters per line than a typical grotesque.