Wacky Vore 2 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, game ui, sports branding, aggressive, futuristic, playful, action, edgy, impact, motion, stylistic edge, theme branding, display emphasis, angular, chiseled, slanted, blocky, stencil-like.
A heavy, forward-slanted display face built from angular, wedge-like strokes and sharply cut terminals. The forms are compact and blocky, with pronounced diagonal shears and triangular notches that create a carved, almost stenciled texture. Counters are small and geometric, and many joins resolve into hard corners rather than curves, producing a crisp, faceted rhythm. The lowercase echoes the uppercase with similarly squared silhouettes and minimal rounding, while figures follow the same aggressive, cut-metal construction.
Best suited to short, punchy settings where impact matters more than long-form readability: logos, wordmarks, posters, title cards, esports and sports graphics, packaging callouts, and game or sci-fi themed UI headings. It performs particularly well when given generous size and some breathing room, letting the angular cuts and silhouettes read clearly.
The overall tone feels high-energy and combative, like speed, impact, and motion are baked into the letterforms. Its jagged cuts and slanted stance read as futuristic and game-like, with a mischievous, unconventional attitude that keeps it firmly in novelty territory.
The design appears intended as an attention-grabbing, experimental display font that conveys speed and attitude through slanted geometry and chiseled detailing. Its repeated wedge terminals and cutout-like counters suggest a deliberate effort to create a distinctive, one-off texture for branding and dramatic titling.
Spacing appears intentionally tight in the sample text, creating dense word shapes and a strong, continuous texture. Distinctive interior cuts—especially in characters with bowls and diagonals—add visual interest but also increase the amount of black, making small sizes feel busy. The design’s consistency comes from repeating the same diagonal shear and notch motifs across letters and numerals.