monkey on Slack
This is how the monkey emoji ð looks on Slack Workspace. Every platform designs emojis differently â see the comparison below.
ð Compare Across Platforms
See how monkey ð looks on every platform:
ðž Slack Design Style
Slack offers users a choice of emoji styles including Apple, Google, Twitter, and its own custom set. Slack also supports custom workspace emojis, allowing teams to upload their own images. The default rendering depends on the user's platform and settings.
ð About monkey on Slack
The way Slack presents the monkey emoji is rounded and friendly, consistent with how Slack Workspace approaches its entire animals & nature set. The design choices trace back to the platform's emoji debut in 2013.
While the monkey emoji carries the same Unicode meaning everywhere, Slack's rounded and friendly rendition gives it a distinct personality compared to how it appears on competing platforms in the animals & nature category.
âđïļ Platform Details
- Platform
- Slack Workspace
- Emoji Support Since
- 2013
- Website
- slack.com
ðĄ Slack Animals & Nature Design Insight
Slack's animal and nature emojis benefit from the platform's generous message spacing and clean interface, which gives emoji more visual breathing room than in denser messaging platforms, allowing details in animal designs to be more apparent.
Slack's giphy and emoji integration allows users to search for animal emojis by species name, with the platform maintaining a custom synonym database that maps common animal names to the correct Unicode character.
Usage Tip
Engineering teams on Slack commonly use animal emojis as codenames for projects and releases, with the animal serving as a visual shorthand in channel names, commit messages, and sprint documentation.
Cross-Platform Note
Nature emojis in Slack's sidebar and channel names render using the web client's emoji font, which differs from the message body rendering, meaning the same tree emoji can look different in a channel name versus a message.
Fun Fact
The party parrot â a custom Slack emoji originating from a GIF of a dancing bird â became one of the most iconic custom emojis in workplace culture, spawning hundreds of variations across millions of Slack workspaces.