╰( ⁰ ਊ ⁰ )━☆゚.*・。゚
Wizard Cool
A cool kaomoji text face. Copy and paste this Japanese text emoticon anywhere.
Works everywhere: social media, messages, documents
About this Kaomoji
The Wizard Cool kaomoji is a Japanese text emoticon from the cool category. Kaomoji are text-based emoticons made from Unicode characters that can be read without tilting your head, unlike Western emoticons.
This cool kaomoji uses a combination of punctuation marks, letters, and special Unicode characters to create an expressive face that conveys cool emotions. Unlike standard emojis which render as images, kaomoji are pure text and work in any environment that supports Unicode characters, including older devices, plain text emails, and code editors.
Tags
When to Use
The Wizard Cool kaomoji (╰( ⁰ ਊ ⁰ )━☆゚.*・。゚) is perfect for:
- •Text messages and chat conversations where you want to express cool feelings
- •Social media posts and comments on Twitter, Reddit, Discord, and Tumblr
- •Online forums and communities where kaomoji are part of the culture
- •Creative writing, usernames, and bio descriptions for a playful touch
Cool Kaomoji Origins
Among the many ways to convey this feeling digitally, this kaomoji stands out for capturing cool emotions through the Wizard Cool face.
Cool kaomoji project confidence, swagger, and effortless style through sunglasses characters, relaxed postures, and composed expressions. Characters like '■' and '▀' form sunglasses, while balanced, symmetric designs suggest calm self-assurance. These faces embody the concept of looking unbothered and stylish, conveying an attitude of quiet confidence.
Cool kaomoji emerged from Japan's street fashion and youth subculture scenes of the 1990s and 2000s. The concept of being 'kakkoii' (cool or stylish) is central to Japanese youth culture, from fashion magazines to anime protagonists. On platforms like mixi (Japan's early social network), users adopted cool kaomoji as part of their online personas, using them to project an image of composed confidence in their digital interactions.
Coolness is culturally constructed and varies significantly. Japanese 'kakkoii' often implies understated competence and quiet confidence. American coolness historically draws from countercultural rebellion. Korean cool is heavily influenced by K-pop aesthetics of polished style and performance. These different definitions of coolness mean that cool kaomoji may read as different types of confidence depending on cultural context, though the sunglasses-wearing face has achieved near-universal recognition as a symbol of being unbothered.