Sans Superellipse Dubir 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code, ui labels, terminal text, dashboards, data tables, technical, retro, utilitarian, industrial, compact, technical clarity, systematic rhythm, terminal aesthetic, compact efficiency, oblique, rounded corners, squared curves, sturdy, crisp.
This typeface uses a monospaced, oblique structure with sturdy, low-contrast strokes and compact proportions. Curves are built from softened, squared-off forms—rounded rectangles and superellipse-like bowls—giving letters a machined, uniform rhythm. Terminals are mostly flat and blunt, with consistently rounded corners that prevent the shapes from feeling sharp. Counters are moderately open and geometry is stable across caps, lowercase, and figures, producing an even, grid-friendly texture.
It performs well where strict alignment and consistent character width matter, such as code samples, command-line/terminal-style interfaces, tables, and technical UI labeling. The sturdy shapes also suit compact headings, captions, and informational graphics that need a clean, engineered look.
The overall tone feels technical and retro, like labeling on equipment, terminals, or engineering documentation. Its slanted stance adds momentum while the squared-round construction keeps it disciplined and functional. The result is a pragmatic, slightly futuristic voice rather than a soft or expressive one.
The design appears intended to combine monospaced utility with a modernized, squared-round geometry and an oblique slant for added pace. It prioritizes consistent rhythm, clear silhouettes, and a robust, equipment-grade aesthetic suited to technical and interface contexts.
The numerals and capitals read with strong, sign-like clarity, and the rounded-square bowls help maintain consistent color in dense lines. The oblique angle is pronounced enough to be noticeable in paragraphs while remaining controlled and systematic.