Spooky Hibu 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween promos, poster headlines, film graphics, game ui, eerie, macabre, haunted, gritty, theatrical, create tension, add texture, evoke horror, handmade feel, cinematic impact, distressed, spiky, ink-splattered, rough-edged, brushed.
A condensed, upright display face with jagged terminals and an intentionally distressed silhouette. Strokes show moderate thick–thin movement and feel brush-driven, with choppy edges, small voids, and ink-splatter artifacts that break up the contours. Counters are generally small and irregular, and many letters end in sharp hooks or tapered points, creating a scratchy rhythm across words. Numerals and capitals carry the strongest personality, while lowercase keeps the same rough texture and narrow footprint for consistent color in lines of text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where the distressed details can be appreciated—movie titles, horror posters, Halloween event materials, album art, and game or streaming graphics. It works well for branding or packaging that wants a gritty, supernatural edge, especially in larger display sizes.
The font reads as ominous and slightly chaotic, evoking hand-painted signage, scratched lettering, and aged print. Its splatters and pointed endings give a haunted, horror-leaning tone that feels more cinematic and atmospheric than refined or formal.
The design appears intended to deliver a spooky, hand-rendered voice by combining narrow proportions with aggressive spikes and worn, ink-splattered distressing. The goal is strong mood and texture rather than neutral readability, mimicking imperfect, analog lettering.
Texture is a defining feature: speckling and worn spots appear both inside and around the strokes, so the face gains character at larger sizes but can look noisy when set small. Pointy entry/exit strokes and uneven curves add energy, but also make spacing feel intentionally irregular for effect.