Specifically made for ColorOS devices, Theme Store is a free personalization app that offers a collection of themes, fonts, wallpapers, and video ringtones that are fully compatible with your system to spice up your device. It also lets you browse seamlessly across various filters, thanks to its clean user interface.

The Theme Store app offers nothing but customization elements; thus, it's all you can find when you launch the app. The overall user experience is smooth and browsing for new themes, fonts, and wallpapers is an easy feat thanks to its UI.


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As we all know, yesterday the Razer Theme Store closed. In order to archive its content I managed to make backups of its wallpapers (both lockscreen and homescreen ones), sounds (alarms, notifications, ringtones), icons, and full packed themes (which contain manifest files as well as the overlays used to change system colors). You can download whatever you like from the following link:

Razer's theming engine was based on Sony's OMS (Overlay Manager System) and worked similarly to how Substratum themes worked without root. Each individual theme has the following content: A Manifest.xml file, Assets folder (audio, icons and wallpapers), Meta-Inf folder (files related to the manifest) and Overlays (.gg files that recolor certain system apps such as the clock, calculator, dial, system UI, etc.)

In other news, I have found there is someone that stocks the drinks cabinet. Razer themselves obviously provides the downloads from the server that's shutting down, but there are development versions supplied to specific people that made their third-party themes, implying there are development kits to create your own theme out there. Maybe I can get a hold of one of these. I'm trying to get in contact with a company I believe made one. This will help me figure out how these themes are stored, and in what form, and with a lot of reverse-engineering, maybe make my own.

*This is smart. If everything was stored on the cloud, including the themes, you would need to download the theme you wanted every single time. That's a lot more data being transferred for your network provider, and the server has to send a lot more requests every time someone wants their theme changed. Thankfully, this gives me the wiggle room I need to make things happen!

Hopefully this keeps people hopeful that the work of the developers, as well as the people over at Nova Launcher that helped make something like the Theme Store possible, isn't wasted, and users are able to access the theme store ad infinitem - what Razer should have done, instead of chickening out and simply shutting this door.

Hi there, 


Just wondering if anyone knows how to identify which theme a store is using, using the theme.store.id number. I'm needing to know which theme is - "theme.store.id:777"


I'm assisting with a website and they're renamed the theme in the backend but when i look at the code i can see theres a theme.store.id that isn't null so am assuming it's a purchased theme and would be great to know which one to be ensure the best way forward for modifications. 


Thank you!

I'm a developer and i have a task related to this project because client need same this design but i can't find any theme they use could you please tell me which theme they using and i find the "theme_store_id":796 . (Thank You)

@RavindraPatel, I've created the list semi-automatically based on themes.shopify.com/themes. When you look into the HTML code, you may notice the data-trekkie-theme-id attribute which holds the theme ID.

I would love to share some feedback in my search to a detector tool. I've used several ones, but there was only 1 that would also share the version of the theme. Why would this matter? A lot of themes, including the ones I install for my clients, have a custom name. The problem with the detectors is that if a custom name was used, it's been labelled at 'must be custom' or you will only see the custom name. 

Sitelypro ( -theme-detector) was the only tool that would show the version of the theme which would include the original theme name (eg Dawn 8.0.0). This way even when the theme name was changed, you could still see what theme was used.

Hey @LukaszWiktor thank you so much for the list. I'm trying to find the theme for this company here - It looks like they removed it from the source code. Is there any way you can pull the data to find out what theme they used? They customized it heavily but knowing the base theme will help us a lot.

I am having the same issue. This is infuriating while I have a web developer sitting here on my dime and Booster has incongruent theme names/numbers and no way to sort out WHICH theme is the one we need to download. Seems quite amateur.

All themes must meet all of the following requirements to be published on the Shopify Theme Store. If your theme is missing any of the requirements in this list, then your submission will be rejected and you will need to make further changes to your theme before it can be resubmitted. To reduce your chance of rejection, you should also test your theme thoroughly.

Themes on the Theme Store must be exclusive to the Theme Store and can't contain external marketing material, so merchants can continue to benefit from the highest quality themes and the newest features.

If you're building a theme based on our reference theme, Dawn, or based on one of your own themes that's already listed in the Shopify Theme Store, then your theme needs to be substantively different. You must make meaningful changes and innovations to the design and functionality of the theme. Below are some cues that we look for:

Image focal points - Make sure that your theme supports the focal point of an image. Focal points can be set in the theme editor image_picker setting, or from the Files page in the Shopify admin.

Images for social sharing - Add a page_image object for social sharing so that merchants can display a thumbnail image in their post when they share a link to their online store on social media, such as on Facebook or Pinterest.

Country selection - When merchants sell to other countries and regions in their local currency customers must be able to select their currency and their country or region on the storefront. Selectors must follow the UX guidelines.

Related product recommendations - Add a section to your product pages that displays an automatically generated list of related product recommendations. Displaying related products to customers makes it easier for them to discover new products, and can help to increase online store sales.

Merchants can use sections and blocks to arrange page templates, which provides more flexibility in their store's content, and allows them to control the look and feel of their online store without needing to edit code.

Performance and accessibility are important factors for merchants when they choose a theme for their online store. Optimizing your theme for performance and accessibility is key to the success of the merchants that you support, and the experience of their customers.

Themes must have a minimum average Lighthouse performance score of 60 across the theme's product, collection, and home page, for both desktop and mobile. Tests are run using a benchmark dataset.

Themes must have a minimum average Lighthouse accessibility score of 90 across the theme's product, collection, and home page, for both desktop and mobile. Tests are run using a benchmark dataset.

You can quickly test the performance of your theme before you submit it to the Shopify Theme Store by running performance tests against a benchmark shop. If you want to test your theme before you submit it, then refer to these performance best practices.

You can quickly test the accessibility of your theme before you submit it to the Shopify Theme Store by running accessibility tests against a benchmark shop. If you want to test your theme before you submit it, then refer to these accessibility best practices.

You must use the routes object for generating dynamic URLs to your storefront. Instead of href=/ to link to the homepage, you can now use href="{{ routes.root_url }}". This ensures that your theme supports any changes that Shopify makes to the URL format, such as allowing a page to be available in multiple languages.

Themes must not include minified .css or .js files, with the exception of ES6 and third-party libraries. Shopify automatically minifies CSS files, as well as JavaScript files that use ES5 syntax or lower, when they're requested by the storefront.

Accessibility for your theme is essential to providing an inclusive experience for both merchants and customers. An accessible theme is designed so that it can be used by everyone, including people with vision impairment.

It's important to organize and name things in a way that won't confuse merchants who are building a store with your theme. Using clear, simple names and a simple setting structure for elements such as sections and presets makes your theme easier to use and navigate.

A theme is crucial to a merchant's brand identity, as it represents the merchant to the world in a visual and interactive manner. A theme should have purposeful direction and strong elements of design, but also provide a degree of flexibility that empowers merchants to take full control of their brand image.

When building Shopify free themes, and assessing themes from our Theme Store Partners, a detailed rubric is used to review the design and UX components of the theme. This ensures that the theme is confidently addressing vital areas such as art direction, consistency, typography, layout, and customer UX.

Choosing a great name for your theme is important when submitting it to the Theme Store. Your theme name helps merchants understand your theme, and ultimately, helps them choose your theme as the right one for their unique needs. e24fc04721

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