Samsung Galaxy / Font / FF LOVEMOMENTS™ LATIN FLIPFONT
REVIEW
FF lovemoments turns your Galaxy into a Valentine's card.
A Monotype Flipfont built around a sentimental script face. Charming for a week, exhausting by the second.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 4 MIN READ
FF lovemoments™ Latin Flipfont
MONOTYPE IMAGING INC.
OUR SCORE
6.4
SAMSUNG GALAXY
★ 5.0
PRICE
Paid
Samsung’s Flipfont mechanism is one of those quiet Android holdovers — a per-OEM hook that lets a paid APK swap the entire system typeface without root, without a launcher, without a theme engine. Monotype has been quietly selling the world’s biggest type library through that hook for over a decade, and FF lovemoments is the romance-script entry in the catalogue.
It is not a typography app in any meaningful sense. It is a typeface designed for greeting cards, dropped wholesale into a notification shade that was never asked. The first morning is delightful — your lock screen looks like a Valentine, your friend’s contact name has a flourish, the weather widget reads like a love letter.
The second morning, you are squinting at a meeting reminder rendered in cursive at 11 a.m., and the joke wears thin. That is the entire arc of this app, and pricing it as a one-time purchase rather than a seasonal rental is the part Monotype hasn’t updated for a market where Good Lock gives most of this away.
It is a typeface designed for greeting cards, dropped wholesale into a notification shade that was never asked.
FEATURES
FF lovemoments is one of Monotype's romance-script Flipfonts — install the APK, pick it inside Settings → Display → Font, and Samsung swaps system text for a heart-laced display face across menus, messages, contacts, and the lock screen. It works only on Samsung Galaxy hardware that supports the Flipfont mechanism, which is most of the modern lineup.
The face itself is a flowing connected script with romantic flourishes — loose terminals, swelling strokes, the occasional heart-shaped flourish on ascenders. It is unmistakably a greeting-card font, not a UI font. Monotype licenses the original family from its display library and repackages it for the Samsung Galaxy Store as a paid one-time install.
There is no companion app, no glyph picker, no per-app override, and no support for emoji or non-Latin scripts. You install it, you pick it in Settings, you live with it until you don't.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The legibility-versus-character tradeoff is at least honest. Monotype knows this is a display face being asked to do a body-text job, and the rendering keeps enough x-height that headlines in the dialer and contact names stay readable at a glance. The italic angle is consistent across weights, so the system doesn't go ransom-note when Samsung's UI mixes regular and bold.
As a once-in-a-while novelty — Valentine's Day, an anniversary week, a teenager's first phone — it lands the brief. Swap in, take a screenshot, swap out. The install is fast, the Settings toggle is instant, and there is no spyware-grade permission ask.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Reading a calendar appointment in a romance script is a chore. After a day, the connected letterforms slow down every glance at the lock screen, and the lack of a tighter weight option means dense screens — Gmail, Slack, Calendar — turn into a wall of curls. There is no way to scope the font to specific apps, which is exactly the feature Samsung's own Good Lock Theme Park grants for free with other typefaces.
The bigger issue is that Flipfont as a category has stagnated. Monotype's catalogue on the Galaxy Store is mostly a decade-old library re-skinned for newer One UI versions, and lovemoments is no exception. A paid Latin-only display face with no glyph preview, no variable-weight support, and no dark-mode-aware tuning feels thin against free Good Lock alternatives.
CONCLUSION
Buy it as a holiday gesture or a gift, not a daily driver. If you want a long-term type change on a Galaxy phone, Good Lock's Theme Park ships better-curated free options and lets you pin them per app. lovemoments earns its spot only when the calendar genuinely calls for hearts on the home screen.