Wacky Ukha 10 is a very bold, narrow, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: horror posters, halloween, headlines, title cards, stickers, spooky, dripping, grungy, pulpy, campy, genre signaling, shock impact, texture first, poster energy, tattered, ragged, inky, blobby, distressed.
A compact, heavy display face with uneven, blob-like contours and pronounced drip terminals. Stems are mostly straight and upright, but edges are irregular and chipped, creating a cutout/ink-splatter silhouette. Counters are small and sometimes partially clogged, with irregular apertures that add to the distressed rhythm. The lowercase is sturdy with a tall x-height feel, and the overall texture reads as a dense, inky mass with frequent downward teardrop drips and frayed bottoms across many glyphs.
Best suited to large-scale display settings such as horror-themed posters, Halloween promotions, game titles, event flyers, and punchy social graphics. It can also work for short labels or packaging accents where a dripping-ink effect is desired, but it is less suitable for long passages or small UI text due to the dense distressing.
The letterforms evoke horror and monster-movie poster lettering—wet ink, slime, or dripping paint. The tone is playful-gothic rather than elegant, leaning into campy creepiness and B‑movie energy. Its chaotic edges and hanging drips create an intentionally unsettling, attention-grabbing voice.
The design appears intended to deliver an immediate “dripping” effect without additional illustration, turning text into a graphic element. It prioritizes silhouette impact and thematic texture over refinement, aiming for instant genre signaling and visual bite.
The distressed pattern is fairly consistent across the set, giving words a strong textured banding along the baseline where drips accumulate. Spacing appears tight by design, and interior detail can close up quickly at smaller sizes, so the font reads best when given room and scale.