Sans Superellipse Dunal 8 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bronkoh' by Brink and 'Univia Pro' by Mostardesign (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, app branding, dashboards, product labels, signage, modern, technical, sporty, friendly, efficient, modernize, add motion, improve clarity, soften geometry, oblique, rounded, superelliptical, compact, monolinear.
A compact oblique sans with monolinear strokes and rounded, superelliptical curves that give bowls and counters a squared-off softness. The forms lean consistently, with generous corner rounding and flattened terminals that keep curves from becoming overly geometric or calligraphic. Spacing reads even and practical, while subtle width variation between glyphs adds a natural rhythm without breaking the clean, engineered feel. Numerals share the same rounded-rectangle logic, staying sturdy and legible with open counters and steady stroke weight.
This font suits interface copy, dashboards, and wayfinding where a clean, modern voice and strong legibility are needed. The oblique stance makes it effective for brand accents, product labeling, and tech-oriented marketing, while the rounded superelliptical forms help it remain friendly in longer passages.
The overall tone is contemporary and energetic, blending a technical, engineered neatness with approachable softness. Its slant and rounded geometry suggest motion and efficiency, making it feel sporty and forward-looking rather than formal or traditional.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, contemporary sans that communicates speed and modernity without sacrificing clarity. By combining an oblique posture with softened superelliptical geometry, it aims for a balance of technical precision and approachable warmth.
Uppercase shapes stay crisp and simplified, while lowercase maintains clear, functional silhouettes with rounded joins and straightforward construction. The oblique angle is noticeable but controlled, keeping lines readable in continuous text and giving headlines a sense of momentum.