Sans Superellipse Dyfo 9 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui titles, tech branding, product labels, signage, posters, futuristic, tech, clean, efficient, modern, digital aesthetic, geometric clarity, interface readability, brand modernity, rounded, squared, geometric, streamlined, modular.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse logic, with monoline strokes and consistently softened corners. Curves resolve into flat terminals, giving many forms a squared-off, capsule-like silhouette. Counters are generally rectangular with generous rounding, and joins are clean and mechanical, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm. Proportions are roomy with broad letterforms and open apertures, while the overall spacing feels even and controlled for display use.
Works well for user-interface headings, tech and gaming branding, product labeling, and environmental or wayfinding applications where a modern, engineered look is desired. Its wide, open shapes and simplified geometry also suit short headlines, logos, and packaging where consistency and clarity are more important than traditional typographic warmth.
The font projects a sleek, futuristic tone—technical and organized rather than expressive or handwritten. Its rounded-square geometry reads as digital and product-oriented, suggesting interfaces, hardware, and sci‑fi design language. The softened corners keep the mood approachable while maintaining a precise, machined feel.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectilinear geometry into a cohesive, contemporary sans that feels digital-native. By combining squared counters, rounded corners, and uniform stroke weight, it aims to deliver a clean, futuristic voice that stays legible and consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Distinctive forms include the boxy round characters (O/0) and the squared, rounded bowls in letters like B, D, P, and R. Diagonal characters (V, W, X, Y) use straight, clean strokes that contrast with the rounded orthogonal structure elsewhere, reinforcing a modular, constructed aesthetic. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle vocabulary, keeping signage-like consistency across alphanumerics.