Script Goka 1 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, children’s, stickers, playful, whimsical, friendly, retro, punchy, handmade impact, cheerful branding, headline character, informal warmth, chunky, bouncy, rounded, cartoonish, informal.
A chunky, hand-drawn display face with rounded forms, soft corners, and uneven stroke rhythm that gives a lively, cutout feel. Letterforms are slightly wobbly and subtly irregular in width, with bulbous terminals and simplified joins that keep counters open and shapes readable. The uppercase leans toward blocky, poster-style silhouettes, while the lowercase introduces more looped, brushy cues (notably in letters like a, g, j, and y), creating a mixed caps-and-script texture. Numerals are heavy and rounded with a similarly playful, slightly tilted stance.
Best suited to attention-grabbing display typography such as posters, event flyers, product packaging, and branding where a friendly handmade voice is desired. It also works well for children’s materials, playful signage, and social graphics, especially in short headlines and punchy callouts where the irregular rhythm reads as intentional charm.
The overall tone is upbeat and humorous, with a warm, handmade character that feels inviting rather than formal. Its bouncy rhythm and bold silhouettes suggest kid-friendly, crafty, and lighthearted contexts, with a slight retro sign-painting or cartoon title-card energy.
Designed to deliver a bold, handcrafted look that feels spontaneous and approachable, combining sturdy, wide shapes with a bouncy rhythm for maximum personality. The intention appears to be strong legibility at large sizes while preserving an informal, doodled expressiveness.
The font’s personality comes from consistent irregularity—subtle variations in curve tension, baseline bounce, and stroke edges—while maintaining strong, high-ink shapes that hold together at display sizes. The mixed treatment between uppercase blockiness and more looped lowercase adds expressive contrast for headlines and short phrases.