Sans Superellipse Abday 8 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, signage, branding, packaging, headlines, modern, technical, friendly, clean, utilitarian, system clarity, geometric identity, readability, modern branding, rounded corners, squared forms, geometric, sturdy, open apertures.
A rounded, squared sans with superellipse construction: counters and bowls read like softened rectangles, and most terminals end in subtly rounded corners. Strokes are monolinear with a steady rhythm and slightly condensed-feeling curves that keep forms compact and tidy. Uppercase shapes are broad and stable (with a squarish O/Q and a direct, economical S), while lowercase maintains clear, open apertures and simple joins; the single-storey a and the compact, hooked f reinforce the functional, geometric build. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with sturdy, legible silhouettes and minimal ornament.
This face is well suited to interface typography, product labeling, and wayfinding where a compact, sturdy sans with softened geometry improves readability and perceived friendliness. It also performs well in short-to-medium headlines and brand systems that want a modern, technical voice without feeling cold.
The overall tone is contemporary and workmanlike, balancing a technical, engineered feel with approachable softness from the rounded corners. It reads confident and straightforward rather than expressive, making it feel suited to systems and interfaces while still remaining friendly.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a highly legible sans for contemporary applications. Its consistent monoline structure, squared curves, and restrained detailing suggest a focus on clarity, scalability, and a distinct but unobtrusive identity.
Several diagonals (notably in K, V, W, X) have a slightly dynamic, forward-cut feel, which adds energy without breaking the otherwise rectilinear logic. The punctuation and spacing in the sample text suggest the design favors clarity and even color over calligraphic nuance.