Compare Emojis Across Platforms: Apple, Google, Samsung, and More

Why Emojis Look Different Everywhere

An emojiEmoji
Mot japonais (絵文字) signifiant 'caractère image' — petits symboles graphiques utilisés dans la communication numérique pour exprimer des idées, des émotions et des objets.
is just a UnicodeUnicode
Standard universel d'encodage des caractères qui attribue un numéro unique à chaque caractère de tous les systèmes d'écriture et ensembles de symboles, y compris les emoji.
code point — a number like U+1F600 that represents 😀. What you actually see on screen is an image drawn by the operating system or app vendor. Apple draws their own version. Google draws theirs. Samsung, Microsoft, Meta (WhatsApp/Facebook), X (Twitter), and others all maintain independent emoji artwork.

The result: the same emoji can look dramatically different depending on where it is sent and where it is received. A 🙂 on iPhone looks like a gentle, slightly upturned smile. On some Android implementations it has historically looked more strained or even passive-aggressive. Sending 🔫 is even more complex — Apple rendered it as a water gun while other platforms kept a realistic pistol, leading to very different interpretations of the same message.

The EmojiFYI Compare tool solves this by showing you all platform versions of any emoji in one place.

How to Use the Compare Tool

Step 1: Select an Emoji

Open /tools/compare/ and use the search bar to find the emoji you want to inspect. Type a name or keyword — "heart", "face", "thumbs" — and click the emoji from the results.

You can also paste an emoji character directly into the search field.

Step 2: View the Platform Grid

Once you select an emoji, the tool displays a grid showing how it is rendered on each major platform:

Platform Notes
Apple iOS / macOS rendering — rounded, glossy style
Google Android / Gboard — flat, material-influenced
Samsung One UI — slightly different shapes and expressions
Microsoft Windows 11 / Teams — 3D-style Fluent Emoji
Meta WhatsApp / Facebook Messenger rendering
X (Twitter) TwemojiTwemoji
Un ensemble d'emoji open source créé à l'origine par Twitter, fournissant des ressources emoji en SVG et PNG utilisables dans n'importe quel projet.
— open-source flat vector set
WhatsApp Separate from Meta in some versions

Each platform image is shown at a legible size so you can spot expression differences, color variations, and style choices at a glance.

Step 3: Compare Design Differences

Look for differences in:

  • Facial expression: Does the face look happy, neutral, or uncomfortable? 😬 varies wildly.
  • Color palette: Some platforms use warmer yellows, others cooler tones.
  • Detail level: Apple tends toward more photorealistic rendering; Twitter/X uses flat vectors.
  • Object design: 🎂 Birthday Cake on Apple has candles and detailed frosting; other platforms simplify it.
  • Skin on hands: Platforms handle the default yellow differently in some edge cases.

Real-World Examples of Platform Differences

😇 Smiling Face with Halo

On Apple, the halo sits above the head in a classic angelic style. On Google's older designs, it appeared more like a floating disc. The expression itself is consistent, but the halo styling differs noticeably.

💀 Skull

Apple's skull is rounded and slightly cartoonish. Microsoft's Fluent Emoji version is a detailed 3D bone-white skull. Samsung's rendering has its own character. All represent the same Unicode point U+1F480, but their personalities differ.

🏃 Person Running

Without a skin tone modifier, this emoji defaults to a yellow figure. But the direction of the runner has differed across platforms — some run left, some run right. An update to Unicode guidelines standardized the direction, but older platform versions still vary.

❤️ Red Heart

Even a simple red heart looks slightly different: Apple's version has a more sculpted, glossy look; Twemoji (X) is a flat matte red; Microsoft Fluent EmojiMicrosoft Fluent Emoji
Les designs d'emoji en 3D de Microsoft introduits avec Windows 11, comprenant des versions animées et publiés en open source.
uses a 3D-shaded design.

When Platform Differences Matter

Professional Communication

If you use emoji in marketing copy, customer support chats, or branded social media, it is worth checking how your chosen emoji appears on the platforms your audience uses most. A 🤩 that looks enthusiastic on iPhone might look bug-eyed on another platform.

Avoiding Misinterpretation

Facial expression emojis are the most prone to misreading. 🙃 Upside-Down Face signals sarcasm on Apple, but the same emoji on other platforms has looked more ambiguous. Running the emoji through the Compare tool helps you gauge the risk.

Developers and Designers

If you are building an app that displays emoji, compare tool output shows you what your users on different OS versions will actually see. This is especially useful when choosing emoji for UI icons or status indicators.

Comparing Multiple Emojis

The Compare tool also lets you load several emojis in sequence. Use the navigation arrows or re-search to move between emojis while keeping the platform grid visible. This is useful when choosing between similar emojis — for example, deciding between ❤️, 🧡, 💛, 💚, 💙, 💜 and wanting to confirm that each color heart is distinct on all platforms.

After comparing platform images, you might want to:

  • Open the Sequence Analyzer to understand how a ZWJJointure sans chasse (ZWJ)
    Caractère Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilisé pour combiner plusieurs emoji en un seul emoji composite, comme l'assemblage de personnes et d'objets pour former des emoji de professions.
    sequence like 👩‍❤️‍👨 is built from simpler components
  • Use the Emoji Keyboard to copy the exact emoji you decided on after your comparison
  • Check the Stats Dashboard to see how many platform images are available per emoji version

The Compare tool is the fastest way to make confident, informed emoji choices — before your message lands differently than you intended.

Outils associés

🔀 Comparaison de plateformes Comparaison de plateformes
Comparez le rendu des emojis sur Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft et d'autres plateformes. Visualisez les différences côte à côte.
⌨️ Clavier emoji Clavier emoji
Parcourez et copiez n'importe lequel des 3 953 emojis organisés par catégorie. Fonctionne dans tout navigateur, sans installation.
🔍 Analyseur de séquences Analyseur de séquences
Décodez les séquences ZWJ, les modificateurs de teinte de peau, les séquences de touches et les paires de drapeaux en composants individuels.
📊 Statistiques emoji Statistiques emoji
Explorez les statistiques sur l'ensemble des emojis Unicode — répartition par catégorie, évolution par version, détail par type.

Termes du glossaire

Emoji Emoji
Mot japonais (絵文字) signifiant 'caractère image' — petits symboles graphiques utilisés dans la communication numérique pour exprimer des idées, des émotions et des objets.
Jointure sans chasse (ZWJ) Jointure sans chasse (ZWJ)
Caractère Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilisé pour combiner plusieurs emoji en un seul emoji composite, comme l'assemblage de personnes et d'objets pour former des emoji de professions.
Microsoft Fluent Emoji Microsoft Fluent Emoji
Les designs d'emoji en 3D de Microsoft introduits avec Windows 11, comprenant des versions animées et publiés en open source.
Modificateur de teinte de peau Modificateur de teinte de peau
Cinq caractères modificateurs Unicode basés sur l'échelle de Fitzpatrick qui permettent de changer la couleur de peau des emoji humains (U+1F3FB à U+1F3FF).
Point de code Point de code
Valeur numérique unique attribuée à chaque caractère dans la norme Unicode, écrite au format U+XXXX (par exemple, U+1F600 pour 😀).
Twemoji Twemoji
Un ensemble d'emoji open source créé à l'origine par Twitter, fournissant des ressources emoji en SVG et PNG utilisables dans n'importe quel projet.
Unicode Unicode
Standard universel d'encodage des caractères qui attribue un numéro unique à chaque caractère de tous les systèmes d'écriture et ensembles de symboles, y compris les emoji.
Version emoji Version emoji
La version de publication dans laquelle un emoji a été introduit pour la première fois, selon un cycle de publication annuel depuis Emoji 4.0 (2016).

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