Sans Superellipse Ondon 10 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code, ui labels, terminal display, technical documentation, packaging, techy, retro, utilitarian, friendly, geometric, screen clarity, system utility, retro computing, modular geometry, mechanical character, rounded corners, squared curves, stencil-like joins, open apertures, boxy forms.
A monospaced, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle construction, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke thickness. Curves tend to resolve into squared, superellipse-like bowls rather than fully circular forms, giving letters a boxy, engineered silhouette. Terminals are clean and blunt, and many joins show crisp, angled notches that add definition to otherwise smooth shapes. Counters are generous and apertures stay relatively open, helping the design remain legible despite its rigid width and grid-like rhythm.
This font suits code and tabular text where fixed-width alignment matters, as well as UI labels, dashboards, and technical documentation that benefit from an even rhythm. Its bold, boxy presence also makes it effective for short product labels, packaging callouts, and headings that aim for a clean industrial/tech feel.
The overall tone feels technical and orderly, like labeling on hardware, terminals, or instrumentation, while the rounded geometry keeps it approachable rather than austere. Its steady spacing and modular forms also read as retro-digital, evoking classic computing and system UI aesthetics.
The design appears intended as a modernized monospaced workhorse with a distinctive rounded-rect geometry—prioritizing consistent spacing, high clarity, and a slightly retro technical voice. The angled notches and squared curves add personality without sacrificing the disciplined structure needed for dense, repeated text.
Distinctive details include angular cut-ins on several diagonals and curves (notably in characters like S, C, G, and K), which introduce a subtle machined character. Figures follow the same rounded-rect logic, with a clear, slashed zero and compact, sturdy numeral shapes that sit firmly on the baseline.