Wacky Larur 2 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, game titles, headlines, logos, medieval, occult, punk, rowdy, theatrical, shock value, gothic mood, handmade grit, display impact, blackletter, angular, fractured, spiky, jagged.
A heavy, broken-stroke blackletter with sharp angular joins and chiseled terminals. Letterforms are built from faceted wedges and irregular cuts that create a fractured, hand-hewn rhythm, with small notches and bite-like counters appearing throughout. Curves are minimized into polygonal arcs, and diagonals dominate, giving the set a tense, serrated silhouette. Spacing and sidebearings feel intentionally uneven, enhancing the rough, one-off texture in words and lines.
Best suited for display settings where texture is a feature: poster headlines, album or event graphics, game/film titles, and brand marks that want a gothic or aggressive edge. It can work for short subheads or pull quotes when ample size and spacing are available, but the fractured details make it less appropriate for long-form reading.
The overall tone is dark and dramatic, leaning into a medieval-gothic atmosphere with a mischievous, rowdy edge. Its jagged construction suggests danger, mystery, and a slightly chaotic energy, making it feel theatrical rather than formal. The impression is more rebellious and stylized than traditional calligraphic blackletter.
The design appears intended to evoke blackletter heritage while deliberately destabilizing it with jagged cuts and irregular geometry. Rather than aiming for historical fidelity, it prioritizes impact, attitude, and a gritty handcrafted feel that stands out in contemporary display typography.
Uppercase forms read as emblematic and crest-like, while lowercase stays compact and knotty, keeping dense color in running text. Numerals and a few letters show especially aggressive cuts and internal slits, which adds character but increases visual noise at smaller sizes. The texture is striking in short bursts, with prominent peaks and broken edges forming an unmistakable word shape.