Sans Superellipse Bymoy 4 is a very bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bloeien' by Aidan Cooke, 'Procerus' by Artegra, 'Coign' by Colophon Foundry, 'Fatbold Slim' by IKIIKOWRK, 'Hype vol 2' by Positype, and 'Exorts Compressed' by Seventh Imperium (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, signage, industrial, condensed, architectural, assertive, retro-futurist, space-saving, high impact, systematic geometry, display emphasis, blocky, rectilinear, rounded corners, high contrast texture, poster-ready.
A tall, tightly condensed sans with uniform stroke weight and a squared, superellipse construction. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and counters, giving letters like O, D, and P a clean, tubular look, while verticals dominate the rhythm. Terminals are mostly straight and clipped, with occasional small horizontal bars in E/F-like forms, and the overall spacing feels compact with narrow internal apertures. The numerals and capitals share the same narrow footprint and rigid geometry, producing a consistent, columnar texture across lines.
Best suited to display settings where height and impact matter: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging panels, and environmental/signage applications. It can also work for compact labels or interfaces needing strong hierarchy, though the narrow apertures suggest it will be most comfortable at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is bold and mechanical, with a retro-futurist, sign-like confidence. Its narrow, upright stance reads disciplined and utilitarian, evoking industrial labeling and streamlined display typography rather than conversational text.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence within minimal horizontal space, using a modular rounded-rectangle skeleton to keep forms consistent across the set. The goal is likely a modern, engineered display voice that remains clean and structured while still feeling distinctive.
The condensed proportions create strong vertical emphasis and a dense “barcode” color in paragraphs, especially where multiple straight stems stack closely (e.g., M/N/W). Rounded corners soften the otherwise rigid forms, helping the font stay legible at larger sizes while maintaining a hard-edged, engineered personality.