duck emoji on Twitter/X
ðŸĶ Twitter/X

duck on Twitter/X

This is how the duck emoji ðŸĶ† looks on Twitter (X) Twemoji. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.

ðŸĶ Twitter/X Design Style

Twemoji features a clean, flat 2D design with consistent line weights and bright, saturated colors. As an open-source project (CC-BY 4.0), Twemoji is used by many platforms beyond Twitter, including Discord. The designs prioritize clarity and cross-platform consistency.

ðŸĶ† About duck on Twitter/X

Twitter/X visualizes the duck emoji with a bold and distinctive style that reflects its animals & nature design language. Since introducing emoji support in 2014, Twitter (X) Twemoji has refined how duck appears to feel natural within its interface.

Cross-platform differences matter for the duck emoji: Twitter/X's bold and distinctive approach may convey a slightly different emotional nuance than the same emoji viewed in another animals & nature set.

â„đïļ Platform Details

Platform
Twitter (X) Twemoji
Emoji Support Since
2014
Website
x.com

ðŸ’Ą Twitter/X Animals & Nature Design Insight

Twemoji animal emojis use minimal detail with maximum personality — the fox has a sly expression, the penguin tilts its head, and the cat shows a distinctive smirk. Each design conveys character through pose rather than rendering detail.

Twitter's API returns emoji shortcodes for animal emojis, and many third-party Twitter clients use these codes to enable searchable animal emoji reactions that are indexed for analytics.

Usage Tip

Nature-related hashtags on Twitter pair naturally with Twemoji animals, and environmental organizations have found that tweets combining nature emojis with relevant hashtags receive higher engagement than text-only alternatives.

Cross-Platform Note

Twemoji animals appear flatter and simpler than Apple or Samsung versions, which means a cute animal tweet may look charming in Twemoji but photorealistic on iOS, subtly changing the comedic versus earnest tone.

Fun Fact

The Twemoji whale was deliberately designed to resemble Twitter's original Fail Whale error page mascot, creating a subtle visual continuity with the platform's early history that most users never noticed.