APP COMRADE

Samsung Galaxy / Font / WDENJOYAUTUMN™ KOREAN FLIPFONT

REVIEW

WDenjoyautumn is a Monotype seasonal font that reads warmer than it should.

A Korean Flipfont with autumnal styling — gentle, rounded, decorative. It is one of dozens of Monotype seasonal drops on the Galaxy Store, and it knows exactly what it is.

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

Samsung Galaxy

WDenjoyautumn™ Korean Flipfont

MONOTYPE IMAGING INC.

OUR SCORE

6.6

SAMSUNG GALAXY

★ 5.0

PRICE

Paid

Flipfont is one of the stranger corners of the Samsung ecosystem — a paid-typeface aisle inside the Galaxy Store that only works on Galaxy phones, only changes the system face, and only previews through a small still image. Monotype has been shipping into this aisle for years, and the WD-prefixed seasonal drops are its background catalogue: spring, autumn, winter, generic “happy” and “enjoy” variants in steady rotation.

WDenjoyautumn sits inside that catalogue without trying to break out of it. The premise is in the name. A Hangul-first display face with a softly rounded register, sold for a small one-time price, aimed at Galaxy owners who treat their phone font the way some readers treat their notebook cover — something to refresh in October without thinking too hard about it.

That low-stakes framing is the right one. Judged as a typeface, it is a competent decorative Hangul with restrained autumn styling. Judged as a purchase, it is a few dollars for something you will see every time you unlock the phone for as long as you keep it set. Both readings land in the same modest place.

Hangul renders with the rounded warmth the name promises, and that alone earns the install for the right reader.

FEATURES

WDenjoyautumn is a Flipfont — a Samsung-only typographic skin that swaps the system Hangul (and Latin) face for a custom one across the OS, on supported Galaxy devices. Installed via the Galaxy Store, activated through Settings → Display → Font and screen zoom. No live preview before purchase, no per-app override.

The design itself is a softly rounded Hangul with mild brush-like terminals and slightly open counters — the visual register a Korean stationer might reach for in October. Latin glyphs are included but feel secondary; the Hangul drawing is where the design effort sits. Weight is single, no italic, no condensed cut.

Monotype ships a long bench of these seasonal Flipfonts under the WD prefix. WDenjoyautumn is one entry in that catalogue, alongside spring, winter, and "happy" variants. It is sold for a small one-time price; no subscription, no in-app upgrades, no ads.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The drawing is the reason to buy this. Hangul renders with the rounded warmth the name promises, and at body sizes on a Galaxy display it stays legible — which is the failure mode of cute decorative Hangul faces. The autumn register is restrained rather than themed; there are no leaf motifs in the glyphs, just a softer wrist.

Pricing makes it a low-stakes purchase. A few dollars for a font you keep across system reinstalls on a Samsung account is fair, and the activation flow is the standard Galaxy Store one — buy, install, pick in Settings. No account binding beyond the Samsung ID you already use.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

Flipfont as a category is a Samsung-only relic, and the lack of a preview before purchase is the perennial sin. You buy a font without seeing your own messages or system text in it; the Galaxy Store image is a single still and not always at a size that tells you what running prose will look like. Monotype could ship its own preview app and has not.

The face itself is fine but unmemorable next to the larger Korean foundries — Sandoll, Yoon Design, AG Typography — whose work shows up on Samsung in licensing deals. WDenjoyautumn is a competent Western take on a Korean register rather than a Korean-foundry original, and at body sizes that comes through as pleasant but not distinctive.

CONCLUSION

Buy this if you change your Galaxy system font twice a year and want an autumn-leaning Hangul skin from a name you can trust to render correctly. Skip it if you don't already swap fonts seasonally — there is no progressive feature here, just a typeface. For a more confident pick in the Monotype WD family, the winter variant tends to draw a tighter, more legible Hangul.