Sans Superellipse Gybuy 4 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, packaging, futuristic, techy, industrial, arcade, sci‑fi, modernity, legibility, modularity, impact, rounded corners, squared curves, extended apertures, blocky, geometric.
A geometric sans with a heavy, monoline build and rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Strokes end in soft corners rather than true circles, giving counters and bowls a squarish, superelliptic feel (notably in O, D, P, and 0). Terminals are generally flat and horizontal/vertical, with minimal contrast and a steady rhythm; joins are clean and slightly softened. Apertures and internal spaces are compact but consistent, and the overall silhouette reads as sturdy and modular, with occasional angular cuts in diagonals (e.g., K, X, Y, and 7) that add a mechanical edge.
Best suited to display settings where its blocky, rounded-square forms can project a clear identity—headlines, logos, product branding, posters, packaging, and UI-style graphics. It performs especially well in short phrases and titles that benefit from its tech and arcade-leaning personality.
The font conveys a contemporary, engineered tone—clean, confident, and distinctly tech-forward. Its rounded-square geometry suggests interfaces, machinery, and retro-futurist design, balancing friendliness (soft corners) with a utilitarian, high-impact presence.
The design appears aimed at creating a modern geometric voice built from rounded rectangles—prioritizing bold silhouettes, consistency, and a modular system that reads quickly at larger sizes while signaling a futuristic or engineered aesthetic.
Uppercase and lowercase share a coherent geometric logic, with single-storey forms and simplified details that keep shapes highly uniform. Numerals match the same rounded-rectilinear language; 0 is a rounded square, and 2/3/5 feature flattened curves that maintain the modular feel. The overall texture stays dense and punchy, with clear edges and a strong, graphic footprint.