Distressed Fulet 6 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, horror titles, event flyers, game graphics, grungy, horror, punk, raw, edgy, shock impact, grit texture, diy feel, dark tone, brushy, ragged, splattered, textured, inked.
A rough, ink-heavy display face with jagged, brush-like edges and frequent interior voids that resemble dry-brush drag or worn ink transfer. Strokes are chunky but irregular, with sharp nicks, tapered ends, and occasional blobby swellings that create a restless rhythm across words. Curves and counters are often partially broken or filled, producing a distressed silhouette that varies noticeably from glyph to glyph while remaining consistently gritty. Spacing and widths feel uneven in a deliberate way, giving lines a handmade, printed-from-a-damaged-plate character.
Works best for short, high-impact display settings such as posters, album/EP artwork, horror or thriller titles, event flyers, and gritty branding accents. It can also serve well for game UI headings or streaming thumbnails where a distressed, high-energy voice is needed, but it is less suited to dense body text.
The overall tone is aggressive and gritty, with a loud, rebellious energy that reads as dark and confrontational. Its scuffed texture and torn contours evoke DIY flyers, underground posters, and spooky or macabre titling where imperfection is the point.
Likely designed to deliver a bold, damaged-ink look that feels hand-rendered and imperfect, prioritizing atmosphere and attitude over smooth refinement. The letterforms aim for immediate impact through torn edges, inconsistent stroke behavior, and heavy texture that reads as intentionally weathered.
The texture can close up fine details at smaller sizes, especially in letters with tight counters (like O/Q/e/a), so it benefits from generous sizing and clean backgrounds. The mixed levels of distress across characters add personality but also increase visual noise in long passages.