Sans Superellipse Pymot 9 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Akhand Bengali', 'Akhand Bengali Variable', 'Akhand Gujarati Variable', 'Akhand Odia', and 'Akhand Odia Variable' by Indian Type Foundry and 'Heading Now' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, signage, data tables, packaging, headlines, modern, efficient, neutral, technical, compact, space saving, clarity, modernization, systematic, condensed, monoline, rounded, clean, utilitarian.
A condensed, monoline sans with a tall x-height and compact spacing. Curves lean toward rounded-rectangle (superellipse) geometry, giving bowls and counters a softly squared, engineered feel rather than purely circular forms. Strokes stay even with minimal modulation, terminals read clean and blunt, and the overall rhythm is vertical and streamlined, with narrow widths that keep word shapes tight and economical.
Performs well where space is limited and clarity is needed, such as UI labels, navigation, dashboards, captions, and tabular or data-adjacent layouts. The condensed build also suits posters, packaging, and headlines that need a compact, contemporary sans voice without heavy stylistic punctuation.
The tone is modern and functional, with a slightly technical, system-like character. Its restrained shapes and steady color feel impartial and efficient, suited to interfaces and information-forward settings rather than expressive or decorative voice.
Likely designed to provide a space-saving, highly legible sans with a controlled, geometric flavor. The superelliptical curves and consistent stroke weight suggest an intention toward clean reproduction, stable texture, and a modern, utilitarian presence across display and text sizes.
Round letters show gently flattened sides and corners, which helps maintain consistent texture in both caps and lowercase. The numerals match the same condensed, no-nonsense construction, keeping figures visually aligned with text. In paragraph use the tight proportions create strong density, so a bit of extra tracking can help at larger sizes when a more open feel is desired.