Spooky Ahha 15 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween promos, game ui, poster headlines, book covers, ominous, arcane, witchy, playful, uneasy, evoke unease, hand-drawn feel, theatrical display, fantasy mood, brushy, spiky, tapered, rough-edged, organic.
A stylized display face with brush-like, high-contrast strokes that swell into rounded blobs and taper into sharp, needle-like terminals. Letterforms are upright but irregular, with variable stroke width and uneven contours that suggest hand-drawn ink or a pointed pen pressed and lifted quickly. Counters are generally open and simple, while joins and endpoints often pinch into spikes, giving many glyphs a jagged, pricked silhouette. The set maintains consistent vertical rhythm and a tall lowercase presence, but individual letters vary in width and finish for an intentionally erratic texture.
Best suited to display sizes where the sharp terminals and swelling strokes can be appreciated—such as horror or fantasy titles, Halloween event promotion, game title screens, and poster or packaging headlines. It can also work for short callouts, labels, or pull quotes when you want a distinctly eerie, hand-inked personality.
The overall tone is darkly theatrical and supernatural, combining sinister spikes with an expressive, handmade bounce. It reads as eerie and magical rather than gory, with a hint of mischievous camp that fits spooky humor as well as tension-building titles.
The design appears intended to evoke a handcrafted, ritualistic feel through dramatic contrast, spiky terminals, and deliberate irregularity, creating a readable yet unsettling display texture. Its consistent thematic detailing across caps, lowercase, and figures suggests it was drawn to deliver a cohesive spooky voice for branding and headline use.
In text, the alternating thick blobs and razor tapers create strong patterning and a lively, scratchy color on the line. The numerals and capitals carry the same pointed finishing strokes, keeping the voice consistent across headings and short bursts of copy.