Spooky Omri 2 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween, thriller posters, game ui, book covers, eerie, scratchy, handmade, uneasy, quirky, create unease, hand-drawn effect, spooky display, add texture, spindly, monoline, jagged, wispy, irregular.
A spindly, monoline display face with wiry strokes and deliberately uneven contours. Curves are drawn with slightly wobbly, hand-sketched arcs, while straight segments often kink or taper into sharp points, giving the outlines a subtly ragged edge. Round letters (O, C, Q, a, e) stay broadly open and geometric but show small notches and jitter, and many joins look loosely stitched rather than mechanically smooth. The overall construction feels lightly drawn with intermittent angular flicks, producing an irregular rhythm across words and a casual, sketchbook consistency rather than strict uniformity.
Well-suited to horror or mystery titling, Halloween-themed graphics, and atmospheric posters where a hand-drawn eeriness is desirable. It also fits spooky game UI moments (menus, chapter cards, quest titles) and editorial display uses such as book covers or pull quotes, especially when set with generous spacing and strong background contrast.
The font projects a quiet horror tone—more creepy and strange than overtly gory—like chalk lines, scratch marks, or a hurried note in the dark. Its fragile strokes and occasional spikes create tension, while the playful wobble keeps it from becoming overly aggressive, landing in an offbeat, unsettling register.
The design appears intended to evoke a handmade, unsettling mood through wiry monoline strokes, imperfect curves, and occasional pointed terminals. Rather than aiming for polish, it prioritizes texture and vibe—suggesting nervous energy and supernatural suspense in display settings.
In the sample text, the thin strokes and uneven edges read best at larger sizes, where the quirky kinks and small spur-like terminals become part of the personality. The letterforms maintain clear silhouettes overall, but the intentionally rough finish can make dense settings feel busy if tightly tracked or used on low-contrast backgrounds.