Samsung-Style Icons and Home Screen Themes
One UI 7 is built for Android users who want a cleaner home screen with a Samsung-inspired icon style. The app centers on a large icon pack, giving users themed replacements for system apps, Google apps, and many common third-party apps.
The main screens organize the library into practical groups such as Latest, All, System, and Google, so users can browse coverage without guessing where to start. The summary area also makes the pack feel easy to inspect, with icon and wallpaper counts available before moving into launcher setup.
Wallpapers and Visual Extras
The app is not limited to icons; it also includes wallpaper browsing for users who want the icon style and background to match. Wallpaper cards are presented as simple visual entries, making it easier to compare looks before applying a broader home-screen theme.
This matters for users who want personalization without building a setup from separate sources. Icons, wallpapers, and related app links sit close together, so the app can work as a small hub for creating a more consistent Android launcher look.
Launcher Apply Flow
One UI 7 includes an Apply area for users who already rely on compatible launchers. Entries for launchers such as Apex, ADW, Action, Go, Holo, and LG Home make the setup path easier to find than manually searching through Android settings.
The app still depends on a launcher that supports third-party icon packs, so the best use case is a customized Android home screen rather than a full system theme replacement. For Samsung-style setups, users can pair the pack with launcher or theme tools that support imported icons.
Icon Requests and Device-Based Coverage
The Request area helps users ask for missing icons when an installed app is not yet covered. Instead of treating the pack as a fixed library, this gives personalization users a way to push coverage toward the apps they actually keep on their device.
The request flow lists installed apps with selectable entries and explains what device and app information may be used to prepare new icons. That makes the feature more useful for people with mixed app collections, especially when they want a theme that reaches beyond the default Android set.