
mango on Twitter/X
This is how the mango emoji đĨ looks on Twitter (X) Twemoji. Every platform designs emojis differently â see the comparison below.
đ Compare Across Platforms
See how mango đĨ looks on every platform:
đĻ 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.
đĨ About mango on Twitter/X
The way Twitter/X interprets the mango emoji is polished and refined, consistent with how Twitter (X) Twemoji approaches its entire food & drink set. The design choices trace back to the platform's emoji debut in 2014.
While the mango emoji carries the same Unicode meaning everywhere, Twitter/X's polished and refined rendition gives it a distinct personality compared to how it appears on competing platforms in the food & drink category.
âšī¸ Platform Details
- Platform
- Twitter (X) Twemoji
- Emoji Support Since
- 2014
- Website
- x.com
đĄ Twitter/X Food & Drink Design Insight
Twemoji food emojis use bold, saturated colors and clean lines that make them pop against tweet backgrounds. The designs avoid complex textures in favor of recognizable silhouettes, optimized for the fast-scrolling timeline experience.
Food brands on Twitter frequently use Twemoji food emojis in their handles and display names, and Twitter's ad platform reports that food emoji in promoted tweets increase click-through rates by an average of 12%.
Usage Tip
Using food emojis in Twitter polls creates visually engaging voting options that drive higher participation compared to text-only poll choices, particularly for casual audience engagement.
Cross-Platform Note
Twemoji food items tend to look more like clip art compared to Apple's photorealistic food, which can change whether a food tweet reads as playful or serious depending on the viewing platform.
Fun Fact
The Twemoji avocado became an unofficial symbol of millennial culture on Twitter, appearing in millions of bios and spawning a wave of avocado-themed memes that transcended the platform.