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๐ŸชŸ Microsoft

shooting star on Microsoft

This is how the shooting star emoji ๐ŸŒ  looks on Microsoft Windows & Teams. Every platform designs emojis differently โ€” see the comparison below.

๐ŸŒ Compare Across Platforms

See how shooting star ๐ŸŒ  looks on every platform:

๐ŸชŸ 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.

๐ŸŒ  About shooting star on Microsoft

Microsoft visualizes the shooting star emoji with a bold and distinctive style that reflects its travel & places design language. Since introducing emoji support in 2012, Microsoft Windows & Teams has refined how shooting star appears to feel natural within its interface.

Cross-platform differences matter for the shooting star emoji: Microsoft's bold and distinctive approach may convey a slightly different emotional nuance than the same emoji viewed in another travel & places set.

โ„น๏ธ Platform Details

Platform
Microsoft Windows & Teams
Emoji Support Since
2012
Website
microsoft.com

๐Ÿ’ก Microsoft Travel & Places Design Insight

Microsoft's travel emojis blend architectural detail with a warm, slightly whimsical 3D rendering style. Buildings feature soft ambient occlusion and gentle color gradients that make them resemble miniature models or dioramas.

In Windows Maps and Bing Maps, travel-related emojis appear as pin markers when shared through links, providing a visual preview of the location type before the map loads.

Usage Tip

In Outlook Calendar, travel emojis in event titles render as colored event indicators on the month view, letting users visually scan for travel days without reading individual entries.

Cross-Platform Note

Microsoft's 3D building emojis appear to have depth and volume, while Apple uses isometric projection and Google uses flat illustration, making cross-platform travel conversations visually inconsistent.

Fun Fact

Microsoft's original travel emojis in Windows 8 were some of the most criticized in the industry for their flat, lifeless appearance. The Fluent redesign was partly motivated by making these emojis competitive with Apple's detailed renderings.