raised hand on Microsoft
This is how the raised hand emoji ✋ looks on Microsoft Windows & Teams. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.
🌐 Compare Across Platforms
See how raised hand ✋ looks on every platform:
🪟 Microsoft Design Style
Microsoft's Fluent Emoji features a vibrant 3D design style with playful proportions and expressive animations. They were open-sourced in 2022, making them freely available. The design emphasizes fun, approachable characters with soft gradients and modern aesthetics.
✋ About raised hand on Microsoft
The way Microsoft interprets the raised hand emoji is polished and refined, consistent with how Microsoft Windows & Teams approaches its entire people & body set. The design choices trace back to the platform's emoji debut in 2012.
While the raised hand emoji carries the same Unicode meaning everywhere, Microsoft's polished and refined rendition gives it a distinct personality compared to how it appears on competing platforms in the people & body category.
ℹ️ Platform Details
- Platform
- Microsoft Windows & Teams
- Emoji Support Since
- 2012
- Website
- microsoft.com
💡 Microsoft People & Body Design Insight
Microsoft's Fluent people emojis were designed with a distinctive head-tilt and slight asymmetry that makes each figure feel like an individual rather than a template. The skin tones use carefully calibrated warm undertones across all five modifier options.
In Microsoft 365 apps, people emojis include Copilot-suggested alternatives that recommend more inclusive or contextually appropriate human emojis based on the surrounding document content.
Usage Tip
In Teams meetings, selecting a person emoji as your reaction displays a larger, animated version on screen during presentations, making it a subtle but effective way to provide nonverbal feedback.
Cross-Platform Note
Microsoft's people emojis appear slightly more stylized than Apple's or Google's, with proportionally larger heads and smaller bodies that give them an illustration-like quality that can feel more casual.
Fun Fact
Microsoft commissioned extensive research with the Unicode Consortium before designing their people emojis, conducting over 2,000 user interviews across 12 countries to understand how people perceived human emoji representations.