Sans Superellipse Ondet 12 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code, ui text, terminal, data tables, labels, technical, utilitarian, industrial, retro, no-nonsense, alignment, readability, systematic, compactness, clarity, rectilinear, rounded-corner, sturdy, compact, high-clarity.
A monospaced sans with a squared, superellipse construction: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles, and curves transition quickly into straight-ish segments. Strokes are even and sturdy, with blunt terminals and minimal modulation, creating a crisp, mechanical rhythm across lines. Proportions are compact and vertical, with generous interior space in rounded letters and distinctly squared shoulders in forms like n, m, and h. Figures and capitals are drawn with the same boxy logic, emphasizing consistent cell fit and predictable spacing.
Well-suited for code editors, terminal themes, and any interface where strict character alignment matters, such as tables, logs, and dashboards. It also fits technical documentation, schematics, captions, and product labeling where a compact, durable texture and clear, monoline shapes are preferred.
The overall tone is practical and technical, evoking terminals, labeling, and instrument readouts. Its rounded-rectangle geometry adds a subtle retro-computing flavor while staying disciplined and matter-of-fact rather than playful. The uniform spacing reinforces an orderly, engineered feel.
The design appears intended to deliver dependable monospaced readability with a distinctly squared, rounded-corner aesthetic. Its consistent geometry and blunt finishing suggest a focus on systematic construction, predictable spacing, and robust rendering in functional contexts.
Round letters such as O and o appear more rectangular than circular, while diagonals (e.g., in V, W, X, Y) are narrow and taut, keeping the texture compact. The design favors clear, simplified silhouettes over calligraphic nuance, maintaining strong consistency between uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.