Wacky Ehvu 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game titles, gothic, spiky, playful, quirky, medieval, decorate, dramatize, signal gothic, add texture, create impact, blackletter, chiseled, jagged, angular, calligraphic.
A decorative blackletter-inspired design with angular, chiseled strokes and sharply notched terminals. The letterforms show broken, faceted edges and small spur-like points that create an irregular rhythm while maintaining consistent stroke weight. Counters are tight and often rectangular, with flattened bowls and squared curves that emphasize a carved, stencil-like feel. Uppercase forms are compact and assertive; lowercase features a relatively tall x-height and simplified, blocky construction that keeps texture dense in paragraphs.
Best suited to headlines and short bursts of text where its jagged detailing can be appreciated—such as posters, title treatments, fantasy-leaning branding, packaging accents, and game or event graphics. It can be used for larger blocks of text for effect, but works most comfortably when set with generous size and spacing to preserve clarity.
The overall tone is gothic and theatrical, with a mischievous, slightly wacky edge created by the exaggerated spikes and uneven bite marks along strokes. It evokes medieval signage and fantasy aesthetics, but with enough oddity to read as intentionally quirky rather than strictly historical.
Likely designed to reinterpret blackletter forms through a bold, carved geometry that reads quickly while still feeling ornamental and unconventional. The consistent weight and simplified skeleton suggest an aim for decorative impact and a strong, textured typographic voice in display settings.
In continuous text the font produces a dark, patterned texture, with pronounced word-shape variation from the highly articulated capitals and the angular joins in letters like k, r, s, and z. Numerals follow the same faceted, blackletter-like construction, reinforcing the decorative, poster-oriented personality.