Serif Other Rage 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logo, album covers, packaging, gothic, occult, medieval, industrial, noir, dramatic titling, gothic flavor, constructed look, period mood, angular, rectilinear, beaked serifs, spurred terminals, compressed counters.
A highly rectilinear serif design built from straight strokes and crisp right angles, with narrow counters and frequent interior cut-ins that create a stenciled, keyhole-like feel. Serifs are sharp and beak-like, often appearing as short spurs or brackets that read as mechanical notches rather than flowing wedges. Curved letters are strongly squared-off, and diagonals appear sparingly and with abrupt joins, producing a rigid rhythm across words. The lowercase is compact and segmented, with prominent feet and intermittent top bars that emphasize a grid-based construction.
Best suited to display contexts where its angular detailing can be appreciated: posters, headlines, logotypes, album/film titles, and packaging with a gothic or mysterious theme. It can work for short bursts of text (pull quotes, chapter heads) when set generously with ample tracking and leading.
The overall tone is dark, archaic, and slightly menacing, evoking gothic signage, occult titling, and late‑19th/early‑20th century display eccentricities. Its severe geometry and notched details give it an industrial, carved-letter energy that feels dramatic and ceremonial rather than conversational.
The font appears intended as a decorative serif with a constructed, almost engraved personality—prioritizing atmosphere and distinctive texture over neutrality. Its squared forms and spurred serifs suggest a deliberate blend of gothic gravitas and mechanical precision for impactful titling.
In text, the dense interior shapes and frequent terminals create a busy texture that rewards larger sizes. The design’s squared curves and repeated spur motifs produce a strong, consistent pattern, but tight apertures can reduce clarity in smaller settings or at low contrast.