Samsung Galaxy / Games > Role Playing / THE GOD OF HIGH SCHOOL
REVIEW
The God of High School squeezes a tournament webtoon into a workmanlike gacha.
Woncomz's mobile RPG turns Park Yongje's martial-arts manhwa into a team-builder of story chapters, boss raids, and timed PvP. The fights look the part; the menus around them are pure 2020s gacha.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 5 MIN READ
The God of High School
WONCOMZINC
OUR SCORE
7.0
SAMSUNG GALAXY
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
In-app purchases
The God of High School arrives on mobile carrying a heavy ask. The webtoon ran on Naver from 2011 to 2022, racked up a global readership, and got a MAPPA anime adaptation on Crunchyroll in 2020. Any game with that lineage walks in pre-judged by readers who already have opinions about how Jin Mori’s charyeok should look in motion.
Woncomz’s answer is a competent gacha RPG that gets the fights mostly right and the surrounding economy mostly familiar. Stages render the manhwa’s signature moves with decent weight, character art tracks Park Yongje’s lines, and the team-builder rewards knowing who pairs with whom. Then the menu chrome shows up — stamina, summons, daily check-ins, banner rotations — and the seams of a 2020s live-service game become visible behind the licence.
This Samsung Galaxy Store SKU is the same game as the Play Store release with Samsung’s billing on top. Whether that matters to you depends entirely on which store ecosystem you already pay through; the gameplay underneath is identical, and so is the grind.
The combat captures the webtoon's snap and recoil, then asks you to sit through three menus before every fight.
FEATURES
G.O.H. is a 3D team-based action RPG built around the cast of Park Yongje's webtoon — Jin Mori, Han Daewi, Yu Mira and the wider tournament roster — pulled through a gacha summoning system. You assemble a three-character party, level them with materials farmed from stages, and run them through a story scenario that follows the manhwa's arcs.
Beyond the campaign, the game opens out into the standard live-service spread: timed boss raids, daily dungeons for ascension materials, a challenge tower with floor-by-floor difficulty curves, and PvP modes including 3v3 team battles and a guild war / coalition layer. Combat itself is real-time with skill cooldowns and ultimate gauges, and most of the recognisable signature moves from the webtoon are wired to character ults.
This Samsung Galaxy Store build is the same client as the Google Play release, distributed under Samsung's storefront with the com.woncomz.goh.samsung package id. Same servers, same gacha, billed through Samsung's payment rails instead of Google Play Billing.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The fights look right. Animations land with the correct snap and recoil, special attacks reference panel compositions from the comic, and character voice lines lean on the Korean cast that fans will recognise. For a licensed mobile tie-in, that is harder to get right than it sounds.
The team-building has more depth than a typical anime-IP gacha — element matchups, position-based skills, and synergy bonuses for canon pairings (Mori-Daewi-Mira) reward players who actually know the source material. Veterans of the webtoon get small payoffs for that knowledge, which is the whole point of a fan-service game.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Everything around the combat is the genre's usual grind. Stamina gates story progression, summons cost premium currency, and the highest-tier characters hide behind banner rates that aren't generous. New players hitting the mid-game wall will recognise the shape of the climb — it's the same wall every modern gacha builds, just dressed in webtoon art.
The Samsung-store distribution adds friction rather than removing it. Updates lag the Google Play build by hours to days, account migration between stores is non-trivial, and Samsung Galaxy Store reviews are a thin sample compared to the broader player base. If you don't specifically need to bill through Samsung, there's no upside to picking this variant over the Play Store one.
CONCLUSION
Worth installing if you read the webtoon and want a fan-service combat playground; skip it if you came in cold expecting a polished single-player action game. The Samsung Galaxy Store version is functionally equivalent to the Play release — pick whichever store your wallet already lives in. Watch for whether Woncomz keeps content cadence steady now that the webtoon itself has finished its run.