red heart on Samsung
This is how the red heart emoji ❤ looks on Samsung One UI. Every platform designs emojis differently — see the comparison below.
🌐 Compare Across Platforms
See how red heart ❤ 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 red heart on Samsung
When you see the red heart emoji on Samsung, you get a bold and distinctive rendition that aligns with the platform's smileys & emotion design philosophy. This interpretation has been available and evolving since 2015.
Compared to other platforms, Samsung's version of the red heart emoji leans more bold and distinctive, which can subtly change how recipients perceive the tone of a message containing this smileys & emotion emoji.
ℹ️ Platform Details
- Platform
- Samsung One UI
- Emoji Support Since
- 2015
- Website
- samsung.com
💡 Samsung Smileys & Emotion Design Insight
Samsung's smiley emojis have undergone more visual overhauls than any other platform, shifting from a cartoon-heavy style in 2016 to a glossy 3D look and finally to the current cleaner design introduced in One UI 5. Each redesign sparked heated user debate.
On Samsung Galaxy devices running One UI 6, the emoji panel includes an AI-suggested reactions row that recommends smiley emojis based on the conversational context in Samsung Messages.
Usage Tip
Samsung's default messaging app allows users to enlarge any smiley emoji to three times its normal size by sending it alone in a message, which triggers a full-bubble animated display.
Cross-Platform Note
Samsung's smileys historically used a flatter, more oval face shape than Apple's round faces, which meant that expressions like the grimacing face could convey a notably different emotion depending on the receiving device.
Fun Fact
Samsung's crying laughing emoji was once described by The Verge as looking like it was 'having an allergic reaction' due to its exaggerated proportions, which Samsung quietly toned down in subsequent updates.