Spooky Dasa 2 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: horror posters, halloween, game titles, haunted events, album covers, eerie, grungy, menacing, playful, chaotic, create tension, evoke drips, handmade look, headline impact, themed branding, drippy, blobby, rough-edged, inked, organic.
A chunky, hand-drawn display face with irregular, ink-heavy strokes and pronounced swelling along stems and bowls. Terminals frequently taper into points or small drips, creating uneven silhouettes and a slightly wet, smeared edge quality. Curves are lumpy and asymmetrical, counters are small and inconsistent, and spacing feels intentionally uneven, producing a jittery rhythm across words. The overall construction stays mostly upright but relies on organic distortion rather than geometric consistency.
Use it for short, high-impact display text such as horror posters, Halloween promotions, haunted-house signage, game title screens, or packaging that wants a drippy, inky mood. It also works well for merch, stickers, and social graphics where bold silhouettes and texture are more important than long-form readability.
The font reads as spooky and mischievous, balancing horror-drip cues with a cartoony, handwritten energy. Its blotty textures and sharp, hanging terminals suggest slime, ink, or melted wax, giving headlines a creepy, B-movie title feel. The irregular rhythm adds tension and a slightly unhinged tone that suits jump-scare or monster-themed visuals.
This design appears intended to mimic heavy brush or marker lettering that has started to drip, creating a visceral, messy texture while remaining readable in headline contexts. The irregular outlines and tapered terminals seem purpose-built to deliver instant atmosphere rather than typographic neutrality.
Legibility holds best at larger sizes where the pointed drips and rough edges remain distinct; at smaller sizes, the tight counters and uneven stroke edges can close up and soften character differentiation. Numerals and lowercase share the same blotted, tapering language, keeping a consistent texture across mixed-case settings.