Wacky Myfi 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, game titles, packaging, medieval, spooky, storybook, handmade, eccentric, atmosphere, display impact, old-world flavor, whimsical edge, theatrical tone, blackletter, gothic, flared, notched, wobbly.
A decorative, blackletter-leaning roman with chunky, low-contrast strokes and irregular, notched terminals that feel carved rather than drawn. Letters are built from simplified straight segments with small kinks and wedge-like flares, producing an intentionally uneven rhythm across the alphabet. Counters tend to be tight and angular, and many joins show abrupt direction changes that amplify the quirky, hand-cut texture. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with polygonal bowls and clipped corners that keep the set visually consistent.
Works well for display typography where mood and character matter most—posters, chapter heads, fantasy or horror-themed titles, game UI/title screens, and packaging or labels that want an old-world, quirky voice. It is better suited to short bursts of text than long paragraphs, especially at modest sizes.
The overall tone is medieval and slightly ominous, like a fantasy chapbook or an old tavern sign rendered with a mischievous twist. Its roughened edges and eccentric details add a theatrical, Halloween-adjacent mood without becoming fully distressed.
The design appears intended to evoke blackletter heritage through angular construction and flared terminals, but with a simplified, irregular execution that prioritizes novelty and personality over strict historical fidelity. Its consistency across caps, lowercase, and figures suggests a cohesive display face built to create immediate atmosphere.
In text, the strong silhouette and busy terminals create a lively texture that reads best when given generous size and spacing; smaller settings may feel crowded in dense areas due to tight internal shapes and frequent cornering. Capitals carry a sign-letter presence, while the lowercase retains the same angular, ornamental voice for continuous copy.