Wacky Fegiw 10 is a very light, wide, low contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, album art, playful, quirky, futuristic, handmade, techy, novelty, attention, sci-fi tone, geometric play, expressive display, angular, monoline, wireframe, tilted, geometric.
A monoline, angular display face built from open, squared curves and sharp corners, with a consistent slight backward slant across the alphabet. Strokes are thin and uniform, with frequent breaks and offset joins that give counters a boxy, “drawn with a single wire” feel. Proportions run wide with generous spacing, and the rhythm is intentionally irregular—some letters are constructed from near-rectangular bowls while others rely on straight diagonals and simplified terminals. The overall geometry favors right angles and flattened arcs, producing a schematic, modular silhouette rather than traditional pen or serif structure.
Best suited for display settings where character is more important than extended readability: posters, headlines, title cards, game or app UI accents, packaging callouts, and logo/wordmark explorations. It performs well when given space and size to show its angular construction, and it pairs nicely with neutral sans text faces for supporting copy.
The tone is playful and experimental, mixing a sci‑fi, diagrammatic vibe with a casual, hand-built looseness. Its quirky construction and tilted stance make it feel energetic and slightly mischievous—more like a visual effect or prop label than a conventional text face.
The design appears intended to create a one-off, attention-grabbing voice by combining geometric, boxy letter construction with purposeful irregularities and a backward slant. The result reads as an experimental, futuristic marker style that prioritizes novelty, motion, and distinctive silhouettes over traditional typographic regularity.
Distinctive details include squared, open bowls (notably in rounded letters), abrupt terminals, and occasional inside strokes that read like inset panels. The numerals and lowercase maintain the same wireframe logic, reinforcing a cohesive but intentionally offbeat system that stands out most at larger sizes.