Print Fyky 3 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'MVB Diazo' by MVB (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, kids media, event flyers, playful, spooky, grungy, cartoonish, handmade, attention-grabbing, handmade feel, cartoon horror, display impact, playful signage, blobby, rough-edged, inked, organic, chunky.
A chunky, hand-drawn print with swollen, blobby letterforms and intentionally uneven contours. Strokes stay broadly consistent in weight, but the silhouette wobbles and dents, creating a textured, inked look as if stamped or painted with a heavy marker. Counters are small and irregular, terminals are soft and rounded, and the baseline/sidebearings feel loosely controlled, giving the alphabet an animated, slightly messy rhythm. Overall proportions are compact with a prominent lowercase presence and simplified, blocky shapes.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, titles, stickers, packaging callouts, social graphics, and event flyers where the bold, handmade personality can lead. It also works well for playful horror themes, comic-style captions, and branding accents, while long paragraphs and small UI text may lose clarity due to the heavy fills and irregular spacing.
The font communicates a mischievous, spooky-cartoon tone—friendly rather than frightening—through its puffy shapes and rough, organic edges. It feels informal and expressive, like hand-lettering for a Halloween flyer, a comic caption, or a playful warning sign.
The design appears intended to deliver an immediate, attention-grabbing handmade look with a cartoony, slightly eerie edge. Its simplified construction and irregular outlines prioritize personality and texture over strict geometric consistency, making it ideal as a display face that feels drawn rather than typeset.
The texture is driven by contour irregularity rather than internal distressing, so it reads as solid black at a distance while revealing handcrafted character up close. The bold mass and tight counters can cause letters to darken and merge in smaller sizes or dense settings.