Wacky Itva 2 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, game titles, event flyers, playful, spooky, mischievous, cartoony, fantasy, thematic display, visual novelty, quirky personality, spooky flavor, spiky, flared, curvy, high-contrast, expressive.
A decorative, irregular display face built from chunky, rounded strokes that taper into sharp points and flared terminals. Forms mix soft bowls with horn-like spikes and crescent cuts, creating a lively silhouette with lots of negative-space bite-ins and asymmetric detailing. Curves dominate, but many joins end in blade-like tips, giving letters a jagged rhythm even when the overall structure stays fairly open. Uppercase and lowercase share the same sculpted, carved look, with simplified interiors and a deliberately uneven, hand-shaped consistency rather than strict geometric repetition.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings where character is more important than neutrality—posters, display headlines, game or episode titles, themed packaging, and event materials. It works especially well when you want a playful spooky or fantasy tone and can give the letterforms enough size and spacing to show their sharp terminal details.
The sharp crescents and thorny terminals read as mischievous and slightly ominous, like playful horror or fantasy signage. It feels theatrical and tongue-in-cheek rather than serious, with a Halloween/monster-movie energy balanced by bouncy, cartoon-like rounding.
The design appears intended to create a one-of-a-kind, expressive voice by combining rounded, friendly masses with aggressive spikes and scooped cuts. The goal seems to be instant thematic signaling—quirky, slightly dark, and highly decorative—rather than everyday text utility.
The most distinctive feature is the repeated use of pointed teardrops and crescent scoops that make counters and apertures feel "carved" rather than drawn. Numerals follow the same motif with swooping curves and tapered ends, keeping a consistent decorative voice across letters and figures.