Wacky Tusu 2 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, game ui, playful, quirky, retro, arcade, mischievous, standout, character, impact, branding, display, blocky, rounded corners, notched counters, scooped terminals, compact counters.
A heavy, blocky sans with rounded corners, squared curves, and frequent notched or scooped counters that produce a stylized, mechanical rhythm. Strokes are mostly monoline in feel but punctuated by sharp internal cutouts and compressed apertures, yielding a distinctive, stencil-adjacent texture in letters like a, e, s, and g. The forms are compact and upright, with a tall lowercase presence and simplified geometry that stays consistent across letters and numerals.
Best suited for titles, logos, packaging, posters, and punchy on-screen graphics where a distinctive, playful voice is desired. It can work well for game and entertainment branding, event promos, and youth-oriented or novelty-forward identities. In longer passages or small sizes, the tight apertures and decorative counters may reduce clarity, so it’s most effective as a display face.
This font gives off a playful, quirky energy with a slightly retro, arcade-like attitude. Its chunky silhouettes and unexpected interior cut-ins create a mischievous, attention-grabbing tone that feels more like a display voice than a neutral workhorse. Overall it reads as bold, fun, and a bit offbeat.
The design appears intended to maximize personality at headline sizes by combining chunky, softened outer shapes with surprising interior notches and cut-ins. It prioritizes a recognizable silhouette and a consistent, emblematic texture across the alphabet, making the typeface memorable even in short words. The overall construction suggests a deliberate push toward a stylized, decorative voice rather than conventional text readability.
The numerals follow the same chunky, notched language as the letters, supporting cohesive titling and labeling. Punctuation and dots appear bold and simple, matching the heavy texture of the main glyph set.