lungs on Samsung
This is how the lungs emoji 🫁 looks on Samsung One UI. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.
🌐 Compare Across Platforms
See how lungs 🫁 looks on every platform:
📱 Samsung Design Style
Samsung's emoji designs are known for their unique and sometimes controversial interpretations. They use a glossy, cartoonish style with bold outlines. Samsung emojis have historically looked quite different from other platforms, which has led to miscommunication between Samsung and non-Samsung users.
🫁 About lungs on Samsung
Samsung One UI gives the lungs emoji a rounded and friendly treatment, staying true to its broader people & body aesthetic. The design reflects choices made since 2015 about how emojis should feel to users on this platform.
Among people & body emojis, the lungs emoji highlights how Samsung's rounded and friendly style diverges from other platforms, reinforcing why the same emoji can feel different depending on the device.
ℹ️ Platform Details
- Platform
- Samsung One UI
- Emoji Support Since
- 2015
- Website
- samsung.com
💡 Samsung People & Body Design Insight
Samsung's people emojis have moved toward Google's proportions in recent years but retain a distinctive slightly glossy skin rendering with visible specular highlights on foreheads and cheekbones that sets them apart.
Samsung's AR Emoji feature maps people emoji expressions onto 3D avatars that can be used as video call filters, bridging the gap between static emoji and augmented reality on Galaxy devices.
Usage Tip
On Samsung keyboards, long-pressing a person emoji reveals the full skin tone palette in a radial menu rather than a horizontal strip, making one-handed selection easier on large Galaxy screens.
Cross-Platform Note
Samsung's hand gesture emojis occasionally face the opposite direction compared to Apple and Google, which has caused misunderstandings — their backhand wave once appeared to be a dismissive gesture when viewed from another platform.
Fun Fact
Samsung was the last major platform to align its people emojis with Unicode reference designs, finally retiring its uniquely styled human figures in One UI 4 after years of user complaints about cross-platform confusion.