Serif Forked/Spurred Gozi 14 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, horror titles, branding, event flyers, gothic, dramatic, ornate, sharp, mysterious, gothic display, theatrical impact, edgy branding, historical mood, blackletter-tinged, spurred, forked, spiky, condensed.
A tightly condensed display serif with pronounced vertical stress and stark thick–thin contrast. Stems are tall and rigid, while many terminals resolve into split, forked points and thorn-like spurs that appear on both ends of strokes and at occasional mid-stem joins. Curves are narrow and pinched, with small, sharp counters and angular transitions that give letters a chiseled silhouette. Overall spacing feels compact, with a dense, vertical rhythm and frequent pointed details that create an intentionally irregular edge texture across words.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing display settings such as posters, title cards, album/EP artwork, seasonal or horror-themed promotions, and branding that wants a gothic or occult flavor. It can also work for packaging or labels where a dramatic, spiked texture is desirable, but it is less appropriate for long passages or small UI text.
The font projects a dark, theatrical mood with a gothic, horror-leaning edge. Its spurred terminals and razorlike points add menace and tension, while the high-contrast structure lends a formal, old-world solemnity. The result feels ceremonial and ominous rather than friendly or neutral.
The design appears intended to merge a condensed, high-contrast serif framework with decorative forked terminals to create a distinctive gothic display voice. The consistent use of spurs and split ends suggests a deliberate goal of adding bite and texture while keeping a disciplined vertical structure for impactful headings.
The forked terminals and intermittent thorny protrusions are a dominant stylistic motif that stays consistent from caps to lowercase and numerals, producing strong texture in headlines. Because internal spaces are narrow and details are sharp, the design reads best when given enough size and breathing room to keep the spurs from visually clumping.