प्लेटफ़ॉर्म तुलना

Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft और अन्य प्लेटफ़ॉर्म पर emojis कैसे दिखते हैं, यह तुलना करें। दृश्य अंतर को एक साथ देखें।

Checker

How to Use

  1. 1
    Enter an emoji to compare

    Type or paste any emoji into the search field, or browse by category to select one. The tool accepts both the emoji character itself and Unicode codepoints like U+1F600.

  2. 2
    Select platforms to compare

    Choose which platforms you want to compare side by side — options include Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft, Twitter/X, Facebook, and WhatsApp. Each platform renders emoji using its own proprietary glyph set.

  3. 3
    Read the rendering differences

    Review the visual differences across platforms. Pay attention to color palette, line style, facial expression nuance, and object representation, as these can significantly alter the intended meaning of a message.

About

Emoji are standardized pictographic characters whose codepoints are defined by the Unicode Consortium, but whose visual appearance is entirely determined by individual platform vendors. Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft, Twitter/X, Facebook, and WhatsApp each maintain proprietary glyph sets, meaning a single emoji codepoint can produce visually distinct — and sometimes semantically different — images depending on where it is rendered. This fundamental architecture, established when emoji were first incorporated into Unicode 6.0 in 2010, was a deliberate design choice that traded visual consistency for vendor flexibility.

The Unicode Emoji Subcommittee publishes the official emoji list and associated data files (including CLDR annotations for names and keywords in dozens of languages) but has no authority over how vendors draw their glyphs. The Emoji Charts published at unicode.org provide reference images for each codepoint, but these are illustrative rather than normative. Vendors participate in the emoji proposal process and often advocate for designs that align with their aesthetic systems.

For designers, developers, and communicators, cross-platform rendering awareness is essential. An emoji chosen to convey a specific emotion, object, or concept on iOS may read differently on a Samsung Galaxy or Windows device. Testing emoji in context across target platforms — particularly for marketing campaigns, customer support interfaces, or widely distributed digital content — helps prevent unintended misreadings and ensures the visual message reaches the audience as intended.

FAQ

Why does the same emoji look completely different on iPhone vs Android?
Each platform — Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft, and others — designs its own emoji glyph set independently, only bound by the Unicode Consortium's semantic description of what each codepoint represents. For example, U+1F600 (Grinning Face) is defined as a grinning face, but Apple renders it with a slightly nervous expression while Google's version appears more broadly joyful. These design choices are proprietary intellectual property. The Unicode Standard intentionally leaves visual design to vendors, which is why cross-platform ambiguity exists.
Can emoji rendering differences cause miscommunication?
Yes — research has shown that emoji rendering differences can substantially change the perceived sentiment or meaning of a message. A study by GroupLens found that a single emoji rendered across platforms could be interpreted as positive on one and negative on another. For example, the 'grinning face with smiling eyes' (U+1F601) was perceived much more negatively on Microsoft's platform than on Apple's due to subtle differences in eye and mouth shape. This is particularly important in professional or cross-cultural communication contexts.
How often do platforms update their emoji designs?
Major platform vendors typically update their emoji glyph sets once or twice a year, often timed around major OS releases. Apple updates emoji with iOS and macOS releases, Google with Android and Pixel feature drops. Older operating systems continue to display older glyph designs, so even on the same platform two users running different OS versions may see different renderings. The Unicode Consortium releases new emoji versions annually, but vendors choose when and how quickly to adopt them.
What is the difference between an emoji version and a Unicode version?
Unicode versions (e.g., Unicode 16.0) track the entire Unicode Standard including all scripts, symbols, and characters. Emoji versions (e.g., Emoji 16.0) are a subset specification maintained by the Unicode Consortium's Emoji Subcommittee that tracks specifically which characters and sequences have emoji presentation. Emoji 16.0 was released alongside Unicode 16.0 in 2024 and added characters including a face with bags under eyes and a fingerprint. An emoji must appear in the Emoji specification to be officially supported as an emoji, not merely as a Unicode character with emoji-style rendering.
Why do some emojis show as a box or question mark on certain platforms?
When a platform does not support a particular emoji codepoint or sequence, it renders a fallback glyph — typically an empty box (□), a box with an X, or the characters 'U+XXXX' in a box. This happens when a newer emoji is used on an older OS that predates the emoji's Unicode release, or when a vendor has not yet designed a glyph for a newly standardized character. ZWJ sequences (zero-width joiner combinations) are especially prone to this, as support for family and profession sequences varies significantly across platforms and OS versions.