Print Geboy 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, kids, social media, casual, playful, friendly, handmade, quirky, informality, approachability, personality, warmth, humor, chunky, rounded, wobbly, inked, organic.
The design is a bold, marker-like print with rounded terminals, soft corners, and low-contrast strokes that keep a consistent, solid color on the page. Letterforms are intentionally irregular: curves aren’t perfectly smooth, joins vary, and proportions shift from glyph to glyph, producing a lively, hand-drawn texture. Counters are generally open and generous, and many shapes lean toward simplified, chunky construction that maintains clarity even as the outlines wobble.
It works well for kids-oriented and casual communication such as posters, classroom materials, party invitations, social graphics, stickers, and lighthearted branding. The thick, rounded strokes and open counters also suit headings, labels, and short body copy where a friendly hand-drawn voice is desired. It is less suited to formal editorial typography or situations that require strict uniformity and typographic neutrality.
This font feels casual, friendly, and a bit mischievous, like marker lettering used for notes, posters, or playful packaging. Its uneven rhythm and slightly wobbly forms add an approachable, human tone that reads as humorous and informal rather than polished or corporate.
The font appears designed to mimic quick, confident hand-lettering with a felt-tip or marker, prioritizing personality and warmth over geometric precision. Its controlled roughness and inconsistent details suggest an aim for a natural, handmade look while remaining readable in short phrases and display settings.
Capitals are broad and chunky with a cartoon-like steadiness, while lowercase letters are looser and more animated, creating a clear informal hierarchy in mixed-case text. Numerals follow the same rounded, hand-inked logic, keeping a consistent color and upbeat tone across alphanumerics.