Wacky Tuke 2 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, game ui, logo, packaging, arcade, futuristic, industrial, techno, playful, impact, theme branding, retro tech, mechanical feel, novelty display, blocky, angular, squared, chiseled, notched.
A heavy, block-built display face with squared counters, blunt terminals, and tightly controlled right angles. The forms are constructed from chunky geometric strokes with distinctive notches, stepped joins, and occasional wedge-like cut-ins that create a machined, modular rhythm. Corners tend to be squared rather than rounded, and the overall silhouette reads compact and punchy, with internal spaces kept small and crisp. Uppercase and lowercase follow the same constructed logic, with simplified bowls and abrupt transitions that emphasize a rigid, engineered feel.
Well-suited for posters, album or event graphics, game titles and UI accents, esports or arcade-themed branding, and bold packaging callouts. It also works for short logo wordmarks where a mechanical, retro-tech personality is desired, but it’s less appropriate for long-form text or small labels.
The design conveys a bold, game-like energy—part retro digital, part fabricated signage. Its quirky cuts and irregular stepping add a mischievous edge, making the tone feel more playful and experimental than purely utilitarian. The overall impression is loud, assertive, and unmistakably “display-first.”
This font appears designed to deliver maximum impact through a modular, cut-metal geometry that feels custom and characterful. The stepped details and angular notches suggest an intention to look engineered and distinctive, prioritizing personality and theme over neutral readability.
Legibility holds up best at larger sizes where the distinctive notches and stepped geometry can be read clearly; at small sizes, the tight counters and complex joins may visually fill in. Numerals match the same squared, constructed aesthetic and feel consistent with the caps in weight and presence.