Spooky Gohe 1 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween promos, thriller posters, haunted branding, event flyers, menacing, chaotic, grungy, dramatic, edgy, evoke fear, add tension, handmade grit, shock impact, dramatic display, brushy, jagged, tapered, rough, gestural.
A jagged brush-script display face with a pronounced rightward slant and aggressive, tapered stroke endings. Letterforms are built from high-contrast, calligraphic strokes that flare into dense, inky masses and then snap into thin, needle-like terminals, creating a sharp, torn edge profile. Counters are often tight and irregular, and the rhythm is deliberately uneven, with variable stroke breadth and occasional streaky “dry brush” textures visible within stems. Overall proportions feel compact and punchy, favoring dramatic silhouettes over uniform, geometric consistency.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as film or game titles, poster headlines, Halloween and haunted-attraction promotions, album/track artwork, and attention-grabbing packaging accents. It can also work for logo marks or section headers where a deliberately rough, hand-rendered intensity is desired rather than clean readability.
The font projects a tense, ominous energy—like hurried lettering made with a loaded brush. Its scratchy edges and spiked terminals read as unsettling and theatrical, evoking danger, suspense, and a gritty late-night intensity.
The design appears intended to simulate forceful brush lettering with uneven ink load and sharp, predatory terminals, prioritizing atmosphere and immediacy. Its expressive irregularities and exaggerated spikes suggest a focus on horror-leaning display usage where character and tension are more important than typographic neutrality.
Uppercase forms are especially angular and clawed, while the lowercase retains a more cursive flow, producing a lively mix of print-like and handwritten cues. Numerals follow the same brush-and-slash logic, staying bold in silhouette with sharp flicks and uneven ink distribution. The texture and extreme terminals can visually fill in at smaller sizes, so it reads best when given space to breathe.