Sans Superellipse Abrir 8 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Glitched' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, ui labels, terminals, dashboards, data tables, utilitarian, technical, modern, clean, systematic, legibility, clarity, utility, ui friendliness, code readiness, rounded corners, square-shouldered, uniform strokes, open apertures, compact curves.
This typeface has a squarish, rounded-rectangle skeleton with consistently softened corners and even stroke widths throughout. Curves are built from broad, superellipse-like arcs, giving rounds such as C, O, and 0 a structured, almost geometric feel rather than a purely circular one. Terminals are mostly blunt and horizontal/vertical, with minimal modulation and a steady rhythm that reads clearly in both uppercase and lowercase. Figures are straightforward and highly legible, with a slashed zero and simple, sturdy forms for 1–9.
It suits environments where consistent spacing and quick character recognition are important, such as code editors, terminal output, configuration screens, and UI labeling. The sturdy numerals and clear punctuation also make it a good fit for dashboards, logs, and tabular readouts where alphanumerics are scanned rapidly.
The overall tone is pragmatic and contemporary, with a distinctly technical, interface-forward character. Its rounded-square geometry feels orderly and engineered, balancing friendliness from the softened corners with a disciplined, grid-like consistency.
The design appears intended to deliver a monospaced, screen-oriented sans with a geometric, rounded-square voice that stays neutral under heavy use. It prioritizes uniformity, legibility, and dependable differentiation of similar characters for technical and interface contexts.
The design emphasizes clarity through open counters and simple construction; letters like a, e, and g keep their shapes compact and controlled, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) remain crisp without adding flair. The slashed zero provides immediate differentiation from O in mixed alphanumeric settings.