Wacky Obha 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, horror titles, halloween, album art, event flyers, grungy, spooky, chaotic, handmade, punk, add texture, create unease, diy feel, shock value, theatrical tone, rough-edged, jagged, distressed, blobby, inked.
A heavy, irregular display face with aggressively ragged contours and a blobby, torn-paper silhouette. Strokes keep a generally uniform weight but the outlines wobble with random bites, spikes, and scalloped edges, creating a noisy texture along every stem and curve. Counters are uneven and lumpy, terminals rarely resolve cleanly, and spacing feels lively and inconsistent in an intentional, handmade way. Overall forms remain readable and mostly upright, with simple structures that let the distressed perimeter do most of the stylistic work.
Works well for posters, title cards, packaging accents, and short bursts of copy where texture is part of the message. It’s especially suited to horror/comedy, Halloween promotions, punk or grunge-themed music artwork, and attention-grabbing headers that benefit from an abrasive, handmade look.
The texture reads as messy, eerie, and unruly—like ink that bled, paint that cracked, or letters cut from a gnawed stencil. It carries a playful-horror energy that can feel punk, campy, or Halloween-adjacent depending on context, with an intentionally crude, DIY attitude.
Likely designed to deliver a one-off, high-impact texture—taking straightforward letter skeletons and coating them in a chaotic, distressed edge to evoke decay, noise, and DIY craft. The goal appears to be instant mood and personality rather than neutral reading comfort.
The rough perimeter creates strong fill-and-noise contrast, so the face holds up best at larger sizes where the edge detail can be seen; at smaller sizes the texture can visually close counters and add grainy heaviness. Mixed-case text shows a consistent distressed treatment across both rounds and straights, giving paragraphs a mottled, animated rhythm.