
selfie on Google
This is how the selfie emoji 🤳 looks on Google Android & Chrome. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.
🌐 Compare Across Platforms
See how selfie 🤳 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 selfie on Google
The selfie emoji on Google stands out with its clean and modern appearance, shaped by Google Android & Chrome's approach to the people & body category. This design has evolved since 2013 to balance expressiveness with platform consistency.
The selfie emoji is one of many people & body emojis where Google's clean and modern design creates a noticeably different impression than other platforms, making platform awareness useful when communicating.
ℹ️ Platform Details
- Platform
- Google Android & Chrome
- Emoji Support Since
- 2013
- Website
- google.com
💡 Google People & Body Design Insight
Google's people emojis prioritize inclusivity with a deliberately simplified style that avoids hyperrealism. The figures use geometric shapes — circular heads, rounded shoulders — creating a friendly, approachable look across all skin tones.
Android 14 introduced an expanded set of multi-skin-tone family emojis rendered through Google's Noto Emoji font, supporting combinations that other platforms handle through fallback sequences.
Usage Tip
In Google Chat, people emojis can be used in custom status messages that appear next to your name in the workspace sidebar, making them visible across an entire organization.
Cross-Platform Note
Google's people emojis often appear with slightly different proportions than Apple's — heads are larger relative to bodies, which gives them a more whimsical character that shifts the tone when viewed on iOS.
Fun Fact
Google employed a dedicated emoji diversity team starting in 2019 that consulted with cultural organizations worldwide to ensure their people emojis represented body types, disabilities, and professions authentically.