Spooky Enba 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, horror titles, game ui, album covers, event flyers, eerie, macabre, grunge, cursed, gothic, distressed impact, horror mood, aged texture, headline display, ragged, textured, jagged, torn, inked.
A rough-edged, heavy display face with irregular, torn-looking contours and uneven stroke boundaries that mimic distressed ink or eroded material. Letterforms show a sturdy core structure while the outlines bristle with small spikes, nicks, and notches, creating a gritty silhouette on every glyph. Counters are often lumpy and organic rather than geometric, and terminals tend to end in blunt, frayed shapes. Overall spacing and widths vary noticeably across characters, contributing to a handmade, unsettled rhythm in words and lines.
Best suited to display settings where texture and mood are the priority: horror posters, haunted attraction branding, game titles and UI headers, metal or dark-ambient album art, and Halloween/event flyers. It can also work for short pulls, chapter titles, or packaging where a distressed, ominous voice is needed, rather than for long reading text.
The texture and ragged edges project an ominous, haunted tone—more “ancient curse” than clean slasher cliché. It feels grimy and theatrical, suggesting weathered signage, horror title cards, and supernatural lore. The consistent distress gives text a restless, uneasy energy even at larger sizes.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, instantly atmospheric headline voice by combining sturdy letterform construction with an aggressively distressed, eroded outline. The goal is to evoke age, decay, and menace while keeping the alphabet broadly recognizable in typical display sizes.
The strongest visual feature is the consistently distressed outline treatment across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, which creates high-impact silhouettes but can reduce clarity at small sizes. The lowercase maintains the same gnawed, irregular edge language as the uppercase, helping mixed-case settings look cohesive. Numerals match the texture and weight, making them suitable for dates and episode/issue numbers in the same style.