Wacky Jime 2 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, halloween, game titles, album art, playful, chaotic, spooky, handmade, comic, attention grabbing, thematic display, hand-cut feel, cartoon menace, expressive texture, angular, jagged, chiseled, chunky, pointed.
A heavy, high-impact display face built from chunky, irregular strokes with sharp, knife-like terminals and frequent wedge cuts. The contours feel hand-shaped rather than geometrically constructed, producing a lively, uneven rhythm and noticeable per-glyph eccentricities. Curves are often faceted into angular segments, counters skew small and off-center, and joins can pinch into spikes, giving letters a carved, torn-paper silhouette. Numerals follow the same exaggerated, uneven massing, reading clearly but with intentionally lopsided proportions.
Best suited for short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, headlines, packaging accents, or event graphics where a wild, characterful texture is desirable. It can also work well for themed applications like spooky promotions, playful horror, or stylized game and entertainment titles; it is less appropriate for long-form reading or small sizes where the irregularities may reduce clarity.
The overall tone is mischievous and slightly menacing, like a cartoon horror or Halloween title rendered with a hand-cut stencil. Its spiky edges and wobbling shapes add energy and humor, making the text feel animated and a bit unruly rather than polished or formal.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, one-off personality through deliberate irregularity—mixing chunky black mass with sharp, animated cuts to create a dramatic, quirky display voice. Its cohesive spiky silhouette suggests an aim for strong thematic impact over typographic neutrality.
Spacing in the sample text appears intentionally irregular, with letters occupying varying amounts of visual width and creating an unpredictable texture. The distinctive, pointed terminals and faceted curves are consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, helping the set feel cohesive despite its roughness.