Serif Forked/Spurred Myha 3 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book titles, posters, game ui, packaging, logotypes, gothic, mystical, vintage, theatrical, storybook, atmosphere, ornament, drama, period flavor, genre signaling, spurred, forked, flared, calligraphic, sharp.
A sharp, decorative serif with pronounced forked and spurred terminals that create a thorny silhouette. Strokes stay relatively light with clear thick–thin modulation, and the serifs often flare into pointed, horn-like tips rather than settling into flat brackets. The forms feel narrow and vertical, with compact bowls and a consistent rhythm that reads as drawn rather than strictly constructed. Notable details include diamond-like dots and inner cuts in some counters, adding texture and a slightly engraved, ornamental finish.
This font is well suited to display roles such as book covers, chapter headings, posters, and branding where a gothic or fantasy mood is desired. It can work for short passages like pull quotes or taglines when set generously, and it is especially effective for game titles, event materials, and packaging that benefit from an ornate, spurred serif texture.
The overall tone is gothic and mystical, with an old-world, fairy‑tale darkness that feels at home in fantasy and period settings. Its spiky terminals and occasional internal motifs give it a dramatic, ceremonial voice—more atmospheric than neutral—suggesting magic, intrigue, and theatrical storytelling.
The design appears intended to modernize a historical serif feel by emphasizing forked, spurred terminals and high-impact details that immediately signal genre and atmosphere. Rather than aiming for neutrality or pure readability, it prioritizes a distinctive silhouette and decorative rhythm that reads as intentional character.
In text, the distinctive terminals and sharp joins become a dominant texture, so spacing and line length matter: it tends to look best when given room and used at display sizes. The numeral and uppercase set visually match the ornamented language of the letters, maintaining the same pointed, flared finishing throughout.