Funky fonts get a bad rap because most of them read amateur. The ones that work do something specific: they carry distinctive personality while still functioning as proper type. Real weights, real alternates, real licensing. These ten Mojomox funky fonts hit that mark. Use them for kids brands, beauty and lifestyle work, music and culture identities, podcast covers, and any project that wants energy.
1. Miox
Groovy bubble font with retro-inspired curves and modern details. A signature funky pick for branding that needs to feel alive without going chaotic.
2. Plox
Cool bubble block font with a playful toy box feel. Modular shapes, hand-drawn character, confident retro vibe. Designers use it for kids brands and gaming.
3. Skay
Handwritten bubble font with brush-ink character. Sits in a sweet spot between casual lettering and display type. Beauty, fashion, and Instagram-driven brands keep coming back to it.
4. Bool
Playful sans-serif with bold proportions and fun alternates. The most expressive member of the Bauhaus family. Good for warm brands that still want structure.
5. Swav
Wavy futuristic display font. The fluid letterforms read as forward-looking and confident. Strong for editorial, fashion, and music branding.
6. Cesty
Friendly rounded display font with a soft 70s feel. The proportions are warm, the alternates expressive. Used across food, hospitality, and lifestyle work.
7. Goji
Playful rounded sans-serif. Warm shapes, weights that pair cleanly, and readability at smaller sizes. The funky font that still works for body copy.
8. Soya
Extended display font with editorial fashion energy. The wide proportions give it confidence without volume. A good pick for trend-aware identity work.
9. Aezra
Sharp narrow serif with long terminals. The funky-editorial angle reads experimental but disciplined. Strong for fashion lookbooks and music covers.
10. Apex
Bold pointy sans-serif with sharp alts. The pointy energy reads loud and confident. Good for music, sports, and gen-Z brand work.
How to use funky fonts without going overboard
The rule of thumb: one funky font per design at maximum, paired with a clean sans-serif or serif for body text. Let the funky font carry the personality. The supporting type does the readable work. Designers pair these with Auria Sans, Vole, or Roma for body and microcopy.
For more playful directions, see our playful fonts and fun fonts guides.









