flag: Benin emoji on Twitter/X
๐Ÿฆ Twitter/X

flag: Benin on Twitter/X

This is how the flag: benin emoji ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฏ looks on Twitter (X) Twemoji. Every platform designs emojis differently โ€” see the comparison below.

๐Ÿฆ Twitter/X Design Style

Twemoji features a clean, flat 2D design with consistent line weights and bright, saturated colors. As an open-source project (CC-BY 4.0), Twemoji is used by many platforms beyond Twitter, including Discord. The designs prioritize clarity and cross-platform consistency.

๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฏ About flag: Benin on Twitter/X

Twitter/X displays the flag: benin emoji with a sharp and well-defined style that reflects its travel & places design language. Since introducing emoji support in 2014, Twitter (X) Twemoji has refined how flag: benin appears to feel natural within its interface.

Cross-platform differences matter for the flag: benin emoji: Twitter/X's sharp and well-defined approach may convey a slightly different emotional nuance than the same emoji viewed in another travel & places set.

โ„น๏ธ Platform Details

Platform
Twitter (X) Twemoji
Emoji Support Since
2014
Website
x.com

๐Ÿ’ก Twitter/X Travel & Places Design Insight

Twemoji travel emojis use a postcard-illustration style with clean geometry and limited color palettes. Buildings are rendered as simple geometric shapes with just enough detail for recognition, reflecting Twitter's emphasis on speed and clarity.

Twitter's location tagging feature pairs with travel emojis in tweets to create geo-enriched content that surfaces in location-based trending topics and regional discovery feeds.

Usage Tip

Travel influencers on Twitter often compose tweet threads with a single travel emoji per destination, creating visual timelines that are easy to follow and bookmark for later reference.

Cross-Platform Note

Twemoji landmarks are intentionally generic to work globally, while Apple's versions include more specific architectural details, meaning the same building emoji can represent different structures to different viewers.

Fun Fact

During the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, Twitter created custom hashflag emojis that appeared alongside travel-related hashtags, temporarily expanding the effective travel emoji set beyond Unicode standards.