σ(≧ε≦σ) ♡
Excited Love
A love kaomoji text face. Copy and paste this Japanese text emoticon anywhere.
Works everywhere: social media, messages, documents
About this Kaomoji
The Excited Love kaomoji is a Japanese text emoticon from the love category. Kaomoji are text-based emoticons made from Unicode characters that can be read without tilting your head, unlike Western emoticons.
This love kaomoji uses a combination of punctuation marks, letters, and special Unicode characters to create an expressive face that conveys love 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 Excited Love kaomoji (σ(≧ε≦σ) ♡) is perfect for:
- •Text messages and chat conversations where you want to express love 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
Love Kaomoji Origins
This carefully crafted arrangement of characters excels at communicating love emotions through the Excited Love face.
Love kaomoji incorporate hearts, blushing cheeks, and starry eyes to convey affection, infatuation, and tenderness. Characters like asterisks become rosy cheeks (*^_^*), while Unicode heart symbols and special characters create faces radiating warmth. The range extends from shy, budding affection to overwhelming passion, with each variation capturing a distinct shade of romantic or platonic love.
Love kaomoji flourished on Japanese messaging platforms and early mobile internet services like i-mode, which launched in 1999. Japanese mobile culture, where texting became the primary communication method for young people earlier than in the West, drove rapid innovation in romantic text expressions. The kawaii (cute) aesthetic deeply influenced love kaomoji, favoring gentle, endearing expressions over overtly passionate ones.
Japanese love kaomoji tend toward subtlety and sweetness, reflecting cultural norms around indirect romantic expression. A blushing face with averted eyes carries more romantic weight in Japanese digital culture than an overt heart-eyes expression. Korean love expressions developed around the finger heart gesture (popularized by K-pop idols), while Western romantic emoticons lean toward explicit heart symbols and kiss marks. These differences mirror how each culture approaches public displays of affection.