Sans Superellipse Dubar 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Flexo' and 'Flexo Soft' by Durotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, product branding, wayfinding, packaging, headlines, friendly, modern, clean, approachable, soft, clarity, modernization, soft geometry, brand neutrality, interface use, rounded, superelliptical, monoline, open apertures, geometric.
A rounded, monoline sans with superelliptical bowls and softly squared curves that keep counters roomy and shapes highly consistent. Terminals are smoothly finished rather than sharp, and curves transition evenly into straights, giving letters a calm, engineered rhythm. Uppercase forms are simple and geometric with broad, open counters (notably in C, G, O, Q), while the lowercase maintains a straightforward construction with single-storey a and g and minimal modulation. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with clear, uncomplicated silhouettes and stable baseline behavior.
Well-suited to UI and product surfaces where a smooth, modern sans is needed, including app interfaces, dashboards, and web headings. The rounded geometry also fits friendly branding, packaging, and wayfinding systems where clarity and approachability are priorities. It should perform best in headings, labels, and short-to-medium text where its geometric regularity can read as intentional and polished.
The overall tone is friendly and contemporary, with a tech-adjacent neatness softened by generous rounding. It feels approachable and non-dogmatic—clean enough for interfaces, but warm enough for consumer branding and casual editorial use.
The font appears designed to deliver a neutral, contemporary sans voice while differentiating itself through superelliptical rounding and consistent, monoline construction. The intent seems to balance functional legibility with a softened geometric personality that feels modern without becoming sterile.
The design favors clarity through open apertures and uncluttered joins, producing legible word shapes at larger text sizes and solid recognition in signage-scale settings. The superelliptical geometry creates a distinctive, cohesive texture across mixed case and numerals without calling attention to individual glyph quirks.