Wacky Omhi 9 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: halloween, horror posters, party flyers, game titles, packaging, spooky, playful, gooey, grungy, campy, thematic display, slime effect, horror cue, headline impact, novelty texture, dripping, blobby, soft-edged, rounded, ink-like.
A heavy, narrow display face built from compact, rounded letterforms with soft corners and an irregular baseline finish. Many glyphs terminate in droplet-like drips and tapered sagging ends, creating a wet-ink silhouette. Counters are small and often uneven, and stroke endings vary from blunt to pointed drips, producing a lively, handmade rhythm. Spacing and widths fluctuate slightly across glyphs, reinforcing the irregular, one-off feel while keeping an overall consistent blob-and-drip motif.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as Halloween promotions, horror-comedy posters, event flyers, game or streaming thumbnails, and themed packaging where the dripping silhouette can carry the message. It’s most effective for headlines, logos, and punchy callouts rather than extended reading.
The dripping terminals and swollen shapes cue classic horror and slime aesthetics, but the rounded construction keeps it more playful than threatening. It reads as campy and theatrical—ideal for spooky fun, monster-movie kitsch, and tongue-in-cheek “gross” humor rather than serious menace.
The design intention appears to be a characterful “drip” display style that instantly signals slime, ooze, or melting paint. It prioritizes recognizable shapes and a consistent gooey texture over typographic neutrality, aiming for quick thematic communication in bold, attention-grabbing applications.
At text sizes the dripping details become the primary texture, so the face works best when the drips can remain distinct. Numerals follow the same wet, sagging treatment, helping mixed alphanumeric headlines feel cohesive.