Wacky Itte 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, album art, game ui, spiky, quirky, playful, edgy, mystical, attention grab, thematic mood, graphic texture, logo friendly, angular, geometric, chiseled, sharp, faceted.
A highly stylized display face built from sharp, faceted wedges and blade-like strokes. Letterforms favor triangular counters, abrupt terminals, and asymmetrical cuts, creating a jagged rhythm with frequent diagonal stress. Curves are rare and when present appear as carved, concave scoops rather than smooth bowls. Proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, with narrow, spear-shaped forms alongside wider, emblem-like shapes; overall spacing reads tight and irregular, emphasizing the constructed, cutout feel.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, title cards, logos/wordmarks, album covers, and game or fantasy-themed UI elements where distinctive silhouettes matter more than continuous reading comfort. It works well for headers, labels, and punchy phrases, especially when set large with generous line spacing.
The font conveys a mischievous, occult-tinged energy—part comic-book menace, part fantasy inscription. Its pointed silhouettes and fractured geometry give it an aggressive sparkle, while the inconsistent, hand-carved character keeps it playful and offbeat rather than formal.
The design appears intended to transform Latin letters into bold, icon-like marks through a consistent language of angular cuts, triangular counters, and chiseled terminals. Its primary goal is personality and atmosphere—creating a dramatic, otherworldly texture for display typography rather than a neutral reading face.
In the sample text, readability drops quickly at smaller sizes due to sharp interior notches, small counters, and uneven sidebearings, but it gains impact at larger sizes where the silhouettes become graphic shapes. Numerals match the same shard-like construction, with several figures reading as emblematic forms rather than conventional text numerals.