Spooky Yamy 10 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween flyers, spooky branding, game ui, book covers, spooky, uneasy, handmade, chaotic, pulsing, horror tone, hand-lettered feel, dramatic texture, attention grabbing, brushy, tapered, jagged, organic, inked.
A rough, hand-rendered display face with brushlike strokes and pronounced tapering that creates sharp ends and occasional wedge-shaped terminals. Letterforms are irregular and slightly inconsistent in width and contour, with wobbly curves, uneven joins, and shifting stroke emphasis that reads as ink laid down quickly. Counters tend to be small and sometimes pinched, while stems and bowls vary in thickness across a single glyph, producing a lively, high-contrast, painted texture. Spacing appears loose and natural rather than mechanically uniform, and the overall silhouette leans toward angular, clawed forms over smooth geometry.
Best suited for short, punchy settings such as horror titles, Halloween promotions, haunted-attraction signage, and eerie packaging or branding. It can also work for game UI headers, chapter titles, and pull quotes where texture and mood matter more than long-form readability.
The font carries a haunted, storybook-horror tone—playful but unsettling—like hand-lettering for a spooky sign or a supernatural poster. Its jittery rhythm and sharp, tapered edges suggest tension and movement, giving lines of text an eerie, scribbled energy.
The design appears intended to mimic fast brush lettering with controlled chaos, using taper, wobble, and jagged terminals to evoke suspense and supernatural flair. Its primary goal is atmosphere and immediacy—creating a distinctive, handmade horror voice at display sizes.
Uppercase forms feel bold and emblematic, while lowercase adds a more casual handwritten cadence; together they create a deliberately irregular, human feel. Numerals follow the same brush-and-taper logic, keeping the set visually coherent for posters and title cards.