Spooky Maje 6 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: halloween, posters, event flyers, headlines, packaging, eerie, macabre, playful, campy, menacing, horror effect, seasonal display, title impact, thematic branding, dripping, ragged, tapered, inked, blobby.
A heavy, compact display face built from simplified, rounded forms with uneven, dripping terminals. Strokes are mostly monoline in feel, but edges break into ragged spurts and droplet-like protrusions that hang from the baseline and occasionally from counters. Curves are bulbous and somewhat irregular, giving the alphabet a hand-cut silhouette; counters stay open enough for quick recognition, while the distressed perimeter adds texture. Spacing is tight and the overall rhythm is chunky, with subtle width variation across letters and numerals that reinforces a hand-rendered look.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as Halloween promotions, haunted attraction posters, horror-comedy titles, party invitations, or seasonal packaging. It works especially well when you want a bold silhouette that reads quickly from a distance, with the drips providing thematic character at display sizes.
The dripping silhouettes read as horror-prop typography—evoking slime, blood, or melting wax—while the bouncy shapes keep it more B‑movie and playful than genuinely grim. It feels theatrical and attention-seeking, designed to signal suspense, haunted-house fun, and spooky-season kitsch at a glance.
The design appears intended as a straightforward spooky display font: keep the underlying letterforms simple and legible, then add consistent dripping and ragged edge effects to instantly communicate a horror/slime motif. The goal is immediate atmosphere and recognizability rather than neutral text setting.
The distressed details cluster most noticeably at terminals and along the lower edges, so the texture becomes more pronounced at larger sizes. The numerals share the same drippy treatment and rounded massing, helping headlines and short callouts stay stylistically consistent across letters and numbers.