Sans Superellipse Dafy 10 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, posters, wayfinding, futuristic, minimal, clean, technical, sleek, modernization, systematic design, digital clarity, streamlined branding, monoline, rounded corners, geometric, extended width, modular.
This font is a monoline sans with extended proportions and a rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Strokes are consistently thin and even, with soft corner radii and squared-off terminals that keep curves feeling controlled rather than organic. Counters tend toward superelliptical shapes, giving letters like C, O, Q, and G a clean, enclosure-like geometry, while diagonals (A, K, M, N, V, W, X, Y) remain straight and crisp. Spacing reads open and orderly, and the overall rhythm is calm and uniform, emphasizing clarity and structure over calligraphic nuance.
It performs best in display and short-to-medium text where a sleek, modern tone is desired—such as app UI labels, dashboards, product marketing, and tech or electronics branding. The wide stance and thin strokes make it especially effective at larger sizes for headlines, signage, and packaging where the geometric personality can read clearly.
The tone is modern and engineered, with a light, airy presence that feels contemporary and slightly sci‑fi. Its rounded corners soften the otherwise technical geometry, producing a friendly but still precise voice suited to digital and product-facing design.
The design intention appears to be a contemporary geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle forms, prioritizing a consistent modular system and a clean, lightweight presence. It aims to deliver a modern, digital feel with softened edges for approachability while maintaining a precise, engineered structure.
Distinctive rounded-rectangle bowls show up consistently across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, helping the set feel cohesive. Numerals follow the same modular logic, with smooth rectangular loops and minimal stroke modulation, matching the font’s streamlined, interface-like character.