Sans Normal Dylez 10 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Maincode' and 'Maincode Mono' by Par Défaut (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, tables, code samples, posters, technical, retro, utilitarian, clean, mechanical, systemic clarity, technical tone, fast readability, structured rhythm, slanted, rounded, geometric, blunt terminals, open counters.
A slanted, monoline sans with generously wide letterforms and a steady, even rhythm. Strokes keep a consistent thickness with rounded curves and broadly open apertures, while terminals read blunt and straightforward rather than calligraphic. Uppercase shapes are compact and geometric, with circular forms (C, O, Q) built from smooth ellipses; diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y) feel sturdy and stable. Numerals are similarly wide and simple, with clear differentiation and a functional, display-friendly presence.
Well-suited to interface labeling, dashboards, tables, and other structured layouts where consistent spacing and quick character recognition matter. The wide proportions and slanted stance also work for bold headings, technical posters, and branding that wants a precise, engineered voice.
The overall tone is technical and utilitarian, with a mild retro-computing flavor created by the steady spacing and disciplined, engineered shapes. It feels practical and no-nonsense, but still approachable due to the rounded geometry and open forms.
The design appears intended to deliver a disciplined, system-like reading experience with wide, geometric forms and consistent spacing, prioritizing clarity and uniform rhythm. The slant adds motion and emphasis without introducing contrast-driven styling.
The sample text shows a consistent texture across mixed case, where the slant and width produce a fast, forward-moving line while staying highly systematic. Wide proportions help characters remain distinct at a glance, especially in all-caps strings and digit-heavy settings.