APP COMRADE

Samsung Galaxy / Font / ANDEVERYGOODAY™ KOREAN FLIPFONT

REVIEW

AndEverygooday Korean Flipfont is a handwritten note rendered in system menus.

Monotype's softer, looser Korean Flipfont — closer to a friend's diary than to a UI typeface. Charming on the lock screen, occasionally taxing in a settings panel.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 3 MIN READ

Samsung Galaxy

AndEverygooday™ Korean Flipfont

MONOTYPE IMAGING INC.

OUR SCORE

6.4

SAMSUNG GALAXY

★ 5.0

PRICE

Paid

Most Korean Flipfonts on the Galaxy Store sell themselves on neatness — a tidier Hangul, a softer Gothic, a friendlier serif. AndEverygooday goes the other direction. It reads less like a system font and more like a page from someone’s notebook accidentally pasted into the Galaxy UI, and that is either exactly what you want or exactly what you don’t.

Monotype distributes a long shelf of these, and the catalogue tends to blur together at thumbnail size. AndEverygooday earns its place by committing to one specific register — handwritten, unhurried, faintly diaristic — and carrying it through every glyph rather than borrowing the personality only on the showcase characters. The English fallback inherits the same handwritten cadence instead of switching to a generic sans, which is the small detail that keeps mixed-language text feeling like it was set by one designer.

The price is small and the install is reversible in two taps, which is the right shape for a purchase that is essentially a mood. What it isn’t is a productivity choice. The same loose strokes that make the lock screen feel personal make a long Samsung Notes page feel more effortful than the default. Buy it for the surfaces you glance at, not the ones you read.

It reads less like a system font and more like a page from someone's notebook accidentally pasted into the Galaxy UI.

FEATURES

AndEverygooday is a Monotype-distributed Korean Flipfont sold on the Galaxy Store as a paid one-shot. Install it, open Settings → Display → Font style, and the entire system — notifications, app drawer, Samsung Notes, Messages — switches to a slightly slanted, casually drawn Hangul face that pairs with a quietly informal Latin alphabet for English fallback.

The design itself is the pitch. Strokes are uneven on purpose, terminals taper like a fineliner, and the rhythm between consonants and vowels keeps the loose pace of actual handwriting rather than the regular cadence of a display font. Latin characters borrow the same mood — round lowercase, gentle ascenders — so the mix between Korean and English text doesn't fall apart mid-line.

Distribution is the standard Flipfont arrangement. The font lives as its own app, the OS picks it up automatically, and uninstalling it puts the system back to the default Samsung One UI typeface with no residue. There is no companion app, no settings panel, no preview screen — the Galaxy Store page is the whole product surface.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The Hangul drawing has genuine character, which is rarer than the Flipfont catalogue suggests. Many fonts on this shelf are slight reshapings of the same skeletons; AndEverygooday commits to one specific voice — a young, unhurried, slightly cheerful handwriting — and holds it consistently across the full glyph set. The Korean numerals and common particles look drawn by the same hand as the consonants, which is the test most casual fonts fail.

Pricing sits in the usual Monotype Flipfont band — a single small purchase, no subscription, no in-app upsell. For a typeface you may live with for months on a lock screen and notification shade, that's the right shape.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

Handwriting fonts pay a legibility tax at small sizes, and AndEverygooday is not exempt. In Settings menus, dense Samsung Notes pages, or long Messages threads the looser stroke contrast smudges together more than the One UI default would. It is a font you choose for personality on the home screen, not for reading a long email.

Marketing copy on the store page is sparse — no preview of mixed Korean/Latin paragraphs, no sample at notification size, no note about whether bold and italic weights map cleanly to system semantic styles. Buyers are essentially trusting the thumbnail.

CONCLUSION

Worth the small purchase if you want your Galaxy phone to feel a little less corporate and you spend most of your reading time in apps that already use larger type — lock screen, Always-On Display, weather widgets, Samsung Notes covers. Skip it if you're a heavy Messages or email reader who'll resent every dense paragraph rendered in a slanted hand. Monotype has more austere Korean Flipfonts in the catalogue if that's the brief.