Sans Superellipse Halit 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Plasma' by Corradine Fonts, 'Lustra Text' by Grype, 'Absalon' by Michael Nordstrom Kjaer, 'Glint' by Pesic, and 'Obvia Expanded' by Typefolio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui, branding, headlines, signage, packaging, tech, futuristic, industrial, clean, confident, modernization, systematic design, tech branding, clarity, squared, rounded, geometric, modular, monoline.
A geometric sans with a squared, superellipse construction: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles, and corners are consistently softened rather than perfectly circular. Strokes are monoline and steady, with broad shoulders and flat terminals that keep the texture even in longer text. The capitals are built from simple, blocky forms (notably the squarish O/Q and compact C/G), while the lowercase keeps single‑storey a and g, a tidy t with a short crossbar, and overall open, legible apertures. Numerals follow the same rounded‑square logic, giving the set a cohesive, modular rhythm.
Well suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and product ecosystems where a clean, engineered voice is desired. It also works effectively for headlines, logos, and packaging that benefit from a modern, geometric look, and can read clearly for short-form signage and labeling.
The font conveys a contemporary, tech-forward tone—precise, engineered, and slightly sci‑fi without becoming decorative. Its rounded-square geometry feels friendly enough for interfaces, yet still reads as industrial and functional, like labeling on devices or modern transport signage.
The likely intention is a modern geometric sans that replaces pure circles with rounded-rectangle forms to create a distinctive, system-like personality while maintaining straightforward readability for general use.
The design’s identity comes from its consistent corner radius and rectangular curves, which create a distinctive silhouette at display sizes and a stable, even color in paragraphs. Diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y, Z) stay crisp and angular, providing contrast against the softer curves of the round letters.