Spooky Nogy 13 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: halloween promos, horror titles, event posters, merch graphics, game ui, macabre, playful, grungy, campy, eerie, create mood, add texture, grab attention, thematic display, dripping, ragged, inked, handmade, tapered.
A heavy, inked display face with irregular contours and pronounced drip terminals that hang from bowls, stems, and cross strokes. Letterforms are compact and fairly condensed, with rounded shoulders and uneven edges that mimic wet paint or brushed ink. Strokes show modest contrast and frequent tapering at ends, creating a jagged rhythm while keeping counters mostly open for readability. The baseline presence feels intentionally unstable due to dangling drips and varied terminal lengths across glyphs.
Best suited for short headlines, posters, packaging accents, and thematic branding where texture and mood are more important than long-form readability. It works well for seasonal campaigns, haunted attractions, horror-comedy content, and game or streaming title cards, especially at larger sizes where the drip details remain clear.
The overall tone is horror-themed but more theatrical than truly menacing—evoking haunted-house signage, monster-movie titles, and gooey “slime” graphics. Its messy, dripping texture adds tension and unease while retaining a cartoonish, high-impact energy that reads well at a glance.
The design appears intended to deliver an instantly recognizable “dripping ink/slime” effect in a compact, high-contrast silhouette that holds up in bold display use. It prioritizes mood and graphic texture while maintaining enough structure and open counters to stay legible in punchy lines of text.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same dripping motif, with especially distinctive tails and descenders on characters like J, Q, g, p, q, and y. Numerals follow the same language with softened shapes and occasional drips, keeping the set visually consistent. Spacing appears geared toward display settings, where the drips can overlap visually if set too tight.