Spooky Puki 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: halloween, horror titles, haunted posters, event flyers, game ui, eerie, menacing, gooey, playful, campy, horror signaling, halloween theming, texture impact, headline grabbing, dripping, tapered, blobby, ragged, inked.
A display face built from chunky, rounded strokes that frequently taper into long, pointed drips. Terminals look wet and irregular, with subtle wobble in curves and occasional hooked ends that create a hand-inked, organic silhouette. Counters are generally open and legible, while overall spacing and rhythm feel intentionally uneven to heighten the distressed, liquid effect. Numerals and caps keep a simple, sturdy structure, letting the melting details carry the style without collapsing readability.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as horror or Halloween titles, haunted-house posters, party invitations, and spooky branding elements. It also works well for game screens, streamer overlays, and packaging where an eerie, dripping texture is desired without sacrificing immediate letter recognition.
The font projects a classic horror-poster mood—creepy and ominous—while staying slightly playful, like a Halloween party graphic rather than a grim thriller. The dripping forms suggest slime, blood, or melting wax, adding suspense and a theatrical sense of danger.
The design appears intended to deliver an instantly recognizable “dripping” horror aesthetic with simple underlying letterforms for quick readability. By combining rounded, friendly masses with sharp, descending points, it balances theatrical scare cues with approachable, poster-ready clarity.
The drip lengths vary from glyph to glyph, creating lively texture in headlines but a noticeably jagged baseline in longer text. Angular spikes are used sparingly; most of the personality comes from soft blobs transitioning into sharp, downward tails.