What Theme Park Is and What’s New for One UI 9
Theme Park is a Good Lock add-on app that lets Samsung Galaxy users build custom One UI themes, changing colors, icons, and interface elements beyond what stock themes allow. The latest release, version 1.1.02.01, focuses on One UI 9 devices and brings enhanced Theme Park app customization that deepens how you control the look of your phone. According to SamMobile, the update introduces three key improvements alongside general bug fixes and usability tweaks. First, it refines how themes interact with core apps like Calendar and Clock, so live icons can better show the current date and time. Second, Samsung has tuned color handling to produce smoother, more consistent themes. Finally, the app now delivers improved overall theme quality for both One UI 9 and earlier One UI versions, so older Galaxy models also benefit.

Deeper Keyboard Customization with New Keycap Designs
One of the most visible upgrades in the new Theme Park version is enhanced keyboard customization for devices running One UI 9. Theme Park now offers new keycap designs for Samsung Keyboard, letting you move beyond basic color swaps and into more detailed One UI interface customization. You can tailor the shape, shading, and contrast of keys to match your chosen palette or wallpaper, giving your typing experience a more cohesive style. This is particularly useful if you already rely on Good Lock modules and want Samsung Galaxy personalization that feels unified from lock screen to keyboard. While quick settings toggles let you switch themes or dark mode on the fly, Theme Park goes further by letting you build keyboard layouts that align with your broader theme pack, so every tap looks intentional, not generic.
Smarter Live Icons for Calendar and Clock
Live icons are small details that make One UI 9 themes feel alive, and the updated Theme Park app takes them more seriously. In earlier versions, applying a theme pack could interfere with live icons for the stock Calendar and Clock apps, causing the date or time to stop updating correctly. The new build addresses this flaw with improved live icons and previews for both apps, so your custom themes no longer come at the cost of basic functionality. Now, when you design icon packs within Theme Park, the Calendar icon can still show today’s date, and the Clock icon can reflect the current time. This makes themed home screens more practical: your icons remain lively and informative instead of being static decorations. It is a small but important win for users who want deep One UI 9 themes without losing everyday accuracy.
Improved Color Tuning and Theme Quality Across Devices
Beyond specific components like the keyboard and live icons, Theme Park’s new version focuses on better color tuning and overall theme quality. Samsung says it has improved how the app interprets and applies color combinations, which should reduce mismatched tones and overly harsh contrasts in custom themes. This matters for Samsung Galaxy personalization because many users start with a wallpaper and let Theme Park generate a color palette; cleaner tuning means fewer clashing elements in notification panels, quick settings, and system menus. Importantly, these improvements are not exclusive to One UI 9 themes. The update also benefits Galaxy devices on earlier One UI versions, keeping older phones visually aligned with newer models. While quick settings shortcuts help you swap modes quickly, Theme Park now offers a more polished foundation for long-term One UI interface customization that feels cohesive in daily use.
How to Use Theme Park for Advanced One UI 9 Customization
To make the most of these new features, start by updating Theme Park to version 1.1.02.01 from the Galaxy Store on your One UI 9 device. Open the app and head to the theme section to generate or edit a theme, then adjust colors and icons while paying attention to the updated previews for Calendar and Clock live icons. Next, move to the keyboard section, where you can experiment with the new keycap designs and align them with your theme’s palette. Once saved, apply your creation and compare it with any quick settings shortcuts you normally depend on; you will notice Theme Park offers far more granular control. With these tools, One UI 9 themes become a personal canvas, letting you tune everything from notification shades to keycaps so your Galaxy phone feels tailored rather than template-based.
