If your face is mainly round
Round faces are defined more by soft transitions than by exact body weight or cheek fullness. The sides curve continuously, the chin is rounded, and the jaw corners are not strongly visible.
High-confusion comparison
Round and square faces can have similar visible width and length. Jaw curvature—not overall fullness—is usually the most useful separator.
Round has soft, continuous curves; square has a broader jaw with visible corners and straighter outline segments.
Round faces are defined more by soft transitions than by exact body weight or cheek fullness. The sides curve continuously, the chin is rounded, and the jaw corners are not strongly visible.
Square faces combine balanced width with more visible angles. The jaw corners tend to be defined, and the forehead, cheekbones, and jaw may appear relatively close in width.
Round has soft, continuous curves; square has a broader jaw with visible corners and straighter outline segments.
Yes. Face-shape categories overlap, and a primary plus secondary description can be more useful than forcing one label. Use the widest zones and jaw structure to identify the dominant pattern.
Hair can hide the outline and soft tissue can change how proportions appear, but neither should replace a straight-on comparison of forehead, cheekbones, jaw, and face length.