Sans Superellipse Dulim 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Military Jr34' by Casloop Studio, 'Stenographer JNL' by Jeff Levine, and 'Evanston Tavern' by Kimmy Design (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, tech branding, dashboards, packaging, techy, futuristic, utilitarian, precise, clean, clarity, modernization, systematization, interface styling, geometry, rounded corners, squared curves, monoline, geometric, compact.
A geometric sans with a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction throughout. Strokes are monoline and consistent, with squared curves, softened corners, and mostly flat terminals that keep the silhouette crisp. Counters tend to be boxy and open, and many joins resolve into tidy right-angle turns rather than continuous curves. Proportions are moderately compact with straightforward, highly regular rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
This design suits user interfaces, control panels, dashboards, and product labeling where clarity and a modern technical tone are desired. It can also work well for contemporary branding, esports or tech-adjacent identity work, and short headlines where the squared-rounded geometry becomes part of the visual signature.
The overall tone feels technical and engineered—like interface lettering designed to look controlled and modern. Its rounded corners soften the voice, but the squared geometry keeps it assertive and machine-like, suggesting a contemporary sci‑fi or industrial sensibility without becoming decorative.
The font appears intended to deliver a streamlined, contemporary sans that reads clearly while projecting a distinctly geometric, device-oriented personality. By standardizing curves into rounded rectangles and keeping stroke behavior uniform, it aims for consistency and a clean, systematized look across all characters.
Capitals show prominent squarish bowls and rounded inner corners (notably in B, D, O, P, Q), while diagonals (A, K, M, N, V, W, X, Y) are straight and clean, reinforcing a constructed feel. Numerals follow the same box-rounded logic with simplified forms and consistent stroke weight for a cohesive alphanumeric set.