pineapple emoji on Google
🤖 Google

pineapple on Google

This is how the pineapple emoji 🍍 looks on Google Android & Chrome. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.

🌐 Compare Across Platforms

See how pineapple 🍍 looks on every platform:

🤖 Google Design Style

Google's Noto Emoji uses a flat, playful design with bold colors and simple shapes. Earlier versions used 'blob' characters which were very popular. Current designs are more standardized but retain Google's characteristic warmth and accessibility. They prioritize clarity at small sizes.

🍍 About pineapple on Google

Google Android & Chrome gives the pineapple emoji a clean and modern treatment, staying true to its broader food & drink aesthetic. The design reflects choices made since 2013 about how emojis should feel to users on this platform.

Among food & drink emojis, the pineapple emoji highlights how Google's clean and modern style diverges from other platforms, reinforcing why the same emoji can feel different depending on the device.

â„šī¸ Platform Details

Platform
Google Android & Chrome
Emoji Support Since
2013
Website
google.com

💡 Google Food & Drink Design Insight

Google's food emojis balance realism with clarity, using slightly saturated colors and clean outlines so items are identifiable even at 16px. The design team includes a food illustrator who researches regional variations of each dish.

Google was the first platform to add regional food emojis like the flatbread and tamale in Android 11, reflecting the company's initiative to represent global cuisines beyond Western-centric options.

Usage Tip

In Google Search on mobile, typing a food emoji in the search bar triggers a rich card showing nearby restaurants serving that food, turning emojis into a practical discovery tool.

Cross-Platform Note

Google's beverage emojis tend to show drinks from a slightly higher angle than Apple's eye-level perspective, giving them a more casual, overhead-photo feel that changes the visual narrative.

Fun Fact

The 2017 burger emoji controversy — where Google placed the cheese below the patty — was escalated to CEO Sundar Pichai himself on Twitter. He declared it a top priority, and the fix shipped in the very next Android update.