Sans Superellipse Bymor 4 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Coign' by Colophon Foundry, 'Cimo' by Monotype, 'Hype Vol 1' by Positype, and 'Agharti' by That That Creative (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, industrial, condensed, assertive, modern, utilitarian, space saving, high impact, modernity, clarity, monoline, vertical, compact, geometric, rounded.
A tightly condensed sans with extremely vertical proportions and compact sidebearings. Strokes are largely monoline, producing a uniform, blocky texture with minimal modulation. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and terminals, giving letters like C, O, and G a superelliptic feel, while corners stay softly squared rather than fully circular. The overall rhythm is tall and columnar, with narrow counters and consistent spacing that reads as a dense, high-impact typographic color.
Best suited to display sizes where its condensed width and heavy presence can deliver maximum impact—headlines, posters, storefront or wayfinding text, and bold brand marks. It also works well on packaging and labels when space is limited but a strong typographic voice is needed.
The font conveys a strong, industrial confidence—clean, forceful, and slightly mechanical. Its compressed geometry and squared-round curves suggest a contemporary, engineered tone rather than a friendly or handwritten one. The result feels suited to attention-grabbing, no-nonsense messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver a powerful condensed voice with geometric, rounded-rectangle construction—optimized for tight layouts and high visibility. It prioritizes a consistent, engineered silhouette and a dense typographic texture for modern display typography.
Distinctive forms include a single-story lowercase a and g, a narrow oval 0, and a compact, high-waisted lowercase s. The punctuation and figures follow the same tall, condensed logic, reinforcing the uniform vertical emphasis across lines of text.