Sans Superellipse Akha 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, posters, branding, packaging, tech, industrial, retro, futuristic, utilitarian, systematic look, technical clarity, retro futurism, display utility, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, modular, compact punctuation.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle skeletons and squared curves, with consistently rounded outer corners and mostly flat terminals. Strokes are even and linear, producing crisp, monoline contours and a clean rhythm in text. Counters tend toward boxy, superellipse-like forms (notably in O, D, 0), while joins are blunt and engineered, giving diagonals in letters like K, V, W, X, and Y a constructed, cut-from-parts feel. Lowercase shows a tall presence relative to caps, with simple, single-story forms such as a and g, and compact dots and punctuation-like details that read as small squared marks.
Well-suited to interface labels, dashboards, and product surfaces where a compact, engineered texture is desirable. It also works effectively for posters, titles, and brand wordmarks that want a retro-futuristic or industrial voice, and for packaging or wayfinding where the squared-round forms remain clear at display sizes.
The overall tone is technical and no-nonsense, with a retro-digital flavor reminiscent of labeling, instrumentation, and early screen or sci-fi UI typography. Its rounded-square geometry softens the mechanical structure just enough to feel approachable while staying decisively engineered.
The design appears intended to combine geometric rigor with softened, rounded corners, producing a modular, contemporary sans that evokes digital systems and industrial labeling while staying clean and readable in short text.
Distinctive details include the squared, inset-like counters in letters such as A, B, P, and R, and a vertical, slot-like interior in the zero that helps separate it from O. Curves are consistently “squared off,” so round letters maintain a rectilinear discipline that keeps word shapes uniform and highly structured.