Wacky Boho 10 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, game titles, horror, fantasy, quirky, medieval, mischievous, eccentric, dramatic, decorative impact, gothic flavor, playful distortion, handmade texture, theatrical tone, angular, blackletter, spiky, chiseled, calligraphic.
A narrow, angular display face with a blackletter-inspired skeleton and sharply faceted terminals. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin modulation, with wedge-like joins, notched cuts, and abrupt corner breaks that create a chiseled, irregular rhythm. Counters are tight and verticals dominate, while diagonals and curves are rendered as segmented facets rather than smooth arcs. The lowercase maintains a short x-height with tall ascenders and occasional idiosyncratic details, giving the set an intentionally inconsistent, handcrafted texture across letters and numerals.
Works well for display typography where character and atmosphere are more important than long-form readability: posters, event flyers, album or merch graphics, game titles, fantasy or horror packaging, and short logotype-style wordmarks. It’s particularly effective for punchy lines, drop caps, and branding that leans into a quirky medieval/gothic voice.
The tone is playful yet gothic—like a medieval script pushed into caricature. Its spiky silhouettes and off-kilter details read as theatrical and slightly mischievous, suited to settings that want historical flavor without strict authenticity. The overall feel is energetic and oddball rather than formal or sober.
The design appears intended to remix blackletter conventions into a more experimental, wacky display style—preserving the vertical, calligraphic structure while exaggerating facets, notches, and irregularities for personality and impact. The goal seems to be strong silhouette and decorative texture rather than typographic neutrality.
In text, the uneven stroke behavior and tight interior spaces make it best at larger sizes, where the distinctive cuts and facets remain clear. The numerals echo the same fractured, vertical emphasis, and the caps carry the strongest blackletter cues, amplifying the font’s poster-like impact.