Solid Uska 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, horror, game titles, album art, jagged, chaotic, playful, menacing, primitive, maximum impact, rough texture, handmade feel, shock value, thematic display, angular, chiseled, shattered, chunky, irregular.
A heavy, solid display face built from faceted, polygonal silhouettes. Strokes behave like cut paper or chipped stone: edges are sharply angled, corners break unpredictably, and curves are largely suppressed into straight segments. Counters are mostly collapsed, so letters read as bold black masses with only occasional notches and cut-ins defining structure. Proportions and sidebearings vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating an uneven rhythm that feels intentionally rough and hand-assembled.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, event titles, game or film headings, album/mixtape art, and attention-grabbing packaging. It works well when you want a deliberately rough, graphic texture and can set it at larger sizes where the angular details help differentiate letters.
The overall tone is loud and unruly, with a spiky, disruptive energy. It can feel mischievous and cartoonish at a glance, but the sharp facets and dense silhouettes also lend a slightly ominous, horror-adjacent edge. The texture suggests something raw and primitive rather than refined or technical.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through solid shapes and aggressively irregular geometry, prioritizing character and texture over conventional readability. It evokes a handmade, broken or carved aesthetic that stands out quickly in display contexts.
In text, the irregular spacing and frequent angular protrusions create a strong zigzag baseline texture and high visual noise. Distinctive geometric forms (notably the round glyphs and several diagonals) add variety, but the dense fill means letter recognition relies heavily on outer contours and cut-ins rather than interior space.