Distressed Nudit 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, album covers, poster headlines, game titles, halloween promo, spooky, grunge, gothic, worn, raw, create menace, add texture, evoke medieval, simulate wear, increase drama, torn, ragged, jagged, hand-cut, inked.
A narrow, upright display face with strongly irregular contours and a chiseled, torn-edge silhouette. Strokes stay fairly even in mass but break into spikes, nicks, and rough notches, creating a distressed rhythm across both stems and bowls. Letterforms lean toward simplified blackletter-inspired construction—angular joins, pointed terminals, and segmented curves—while keeping clear counters and a consistent vertical stance. The texture is prominent at all sizes, with uneven edges acting as the primary stylistic signal rather than dramatic stroke modulation.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as horror or thriller titles, event posters, album artwork, game/stream overlays, and themed packaging. It works especially well where the distressed perimeter can be read as texture—large headings, logos, and punchy pull quotes—rather than continuous body text.
The overall tone is dark and abrasive, evoking horror titles, occult ephemera, and worn print from aged posters or photocopied flyers. Its sharp, frayed edges add tension and menace, while the gothic undercurrent gives it a medieval, ritualistic flavor.
The design appears intended to merge blackletter-like structure with an aggressive distressed treatment, producing a compact headline face that feels antique, ominous, and weathered. The consistent upright skeleton supports readability, while the heavily eroded edges deliver the thematic impact.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same distressed logic, keeping a cohesive “ripped ink” texture across the set. Numerals match the angular, roughened treatment, reading clearly while maintaining the same jagged perimeter. In longer lines the repeated edge noise becomes a strong graphic pattern, so spacing and size will influence legibility more than in a clean display face.