Distressed Jego 3 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, horror titles, event flyers, grunge, horror, punk, raw, comic, add texture, create impact, evoke wear, signal menace, handmade feel, ragged, blotchy, torn, inked, chunky.
A heavy, display-oriented face with chunky silhouettes and aggressively irregular, ragged contours. Strokes look like they were made with a dry brush or worn stamp, creating torn-looking edges, occasional nicks, and uneven terminals. Counters remain mostly open but feel slightly eroded, and rounded forms (O, C, G) read as lumpy and organic rather than geometric. Overall spacing is relatively tight, with lively, inconsistent sidebearings that add to the handmade, distressed rhythm.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, title cards, flyers, packaging callouts, and entertainment graphics where texture is an asset. It can also work for band/album artwork, game or film titles, and themed signage that benefits from a rough, inked presence. For readability, it performs most confidently at moderate to large sizes and with generous line spacing.
The texture and rough perimeter treatment give it a gritty, rebellious tone with clear horror-and-poster energy. It feels loud and urgent, like ink dragged across paper or type pulled from a damaged print block. The result is attention-grabbing and deliberately imperfect, prioritizing attitude over refinement.
This design appears intended to deliver a bold display voice with a deliberately weathered, handmade print texture. The consistent roughening across forms suggests a controlled distressed treatment aimed at evoking worn type, stamped ink, or brushed lettering while keeping letterforms recognizable.
The alphabet shows consistent distressing across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, keeping a unified texture while letting each glyph retain a slightly unique bite. In paragraph-style sample lines, the dark color and jagged edges build strong impact but can quickly dominate the page, especially at smaller sizes or in long runs.