Gungsuhche Font !!hot!! [Deluxe]

Fast forward to the digital age. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, as Microsoft sought to support global languages in Windows, they partnered with Korean foundries to include native fonts. was born as the digital incarnation of Gungche . It was included as a system font in Windows 2000, XP, and every version since. Its inclusion cemented its status as one of the "big three" Korean fonts alongside Batang (serif) and Gulim (sans-serif).

Article last updated: 2025

Gungsuhche (궁서체), often Romanized as Gungsuhche or GungSeoChe , is a brush-style serif font that mimics the fluid, expressive strokes of traditional Korean calligraphy written with a brush and ink. The name literally translates to "Palace Style Script" or "Court Style Font," hinting at its elegant, formal origins. Unlike the more geometric and modern Gothic (sans-serif) fonts that dominate digital interfaces, Gungsuhche brings a human touch—complete with tapered strokes, varying thickness, and a slightly irregular baseline that feels written, not typeset. gungsuhche font

body font-family: "Gungsuh", "궁서", "GungsuhChe", "Batang", serif; Fast forward to the digital age