Sans Superellipse Dudud 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Fou Mixed Pro' and 'Fou Pro' by URW Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, branding, posters, product design, modern, techy, sleek, sporty, efficient, contemporary utility, soft-tech voice, forward motion, geometric consistency, rounded, oblique, geometric, superelliptic, monolinear.
An oblique sans with softly squared, superellipse-driven curves and predominantly monolinear strokes. Forms lean forward consistently, with rounded terminals and gently flattened curves that give bowls and counters a slightly rectangular feel rather than purely circular. The rhythm is tight and clean, with compact apertures and smooth joins; diagonals and curves stay controlled and even. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, maintaining uniform stroke color and clear, contemporary silhouettes.
Well suited for interface labels, product branding, and contemporary headlines where a clean, forward-moving voice is helpful. The controlled geometry and rounded corners also make it a good fit for tech, sports, or mobility-themed design systems, and for short-to-medium text in marketing or editorial callouts.
The overall tone feels modern and efficient, with a subtle techno flavor created by the squarish rounding and steady forward slant. It reads as streamlined and energetic without becoming aggressive, balancing friendliness from the soft corners with a purposeful, engineered character.
Likely designed to combine a clean sans foundation with a distinctive superelliptic geometry and an energetic oblique stance. The goal appears to be a contemporary workhorse with a recognizable “soft-tech” signature that stays consistent across letters and numerals.
The superelliptic construction is especially evident in rounded letters and digits, where curves appear gently flattened at the extremes, producing a “soft-square” profile. The forward slant is pronounced enough to convey motion, yet the shapes remain stable and legible in continuous text.