Sans Superellipse Lisy 2 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, coding, terminal text, wayfinding, techy, futuristic, systematic, clean, retro-digital, clarity, modularity, tech aesthetic, system consistency, rounded corners, squared curves, angular joins, open counters, geometric.
A geometric sans built from squared, superellipse-like curves with consistently rounded corners and a steady, even stroke. Letterforms favor straight horizontals and verticals with clipped diagonals, giving many shapes a rounded-rectangle feel rather than true circles. Curves are minimized and simplified, with open apertures and tidy internal counters; terminals are typically blunt and softly radiused. The set reads orderly and grid-friendly, with uniform character widths and a controlled, engineered rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Works well where consistent character widths and clear differentiation support scanning and alignment—such as interface labels, data dashboards, technical documentation, terminal-style layouts, and compact captions. It also suits branding or packaging that aims for a clean, digital-leaning voice without feeling overly mechanical.
The overall tone is technological and utilitarian, evoking digital displays, instrumentation, and schematic labeling. Its softened corners keep it approachable, while the squared geometry maintains a precise, engineered character that feels modern with a subtle retro-computing edge.
The design appears intended to deliver a disciplined, grid-based reading experience with a distinctive rounded-rectangle geometry, balancing clarity with a recognizable digital aesthetic. It prioritizes consistency and structural simplicity, likely to stay stable in tight, modular layouts.
Distinctive superelliptic construction is especially apparent in rounded letters and numerals, where corners replace arcs and diagonals are often chamfered. The lowercase maintains a compact, functional profile with simple single-storey forms where applicable, and punctuation follows the same squared, radiused logic for a cohesive texture in text.