Blood drop faces, fanged text emoticons, and gothic accents for chats and bios

Blood Kaomoji

Copy blood kaomoji, fanged and vomiting text faces, blood drop and knife emoji combos, and gothic cross accents for horror posts, gore roleplay, and dark aesthetic bios.

Blood Kaomoji copy and paste

187 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 200 blood kaomoji text faces.

Blood Kaomoji ASCII art

Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.

5 pieces
blood-themed face3×17

Horror and gore roleplay

Fanged and vomiting faces read as an in-character reaction to injury without breaking into full prose description.

Halloween and horror captions

Blood drop, knife, and skull combos signal the theme instantly in a caption or comment.

Gothic and alt aesthetic bios

Cross, coffin, and blood accents build a dark profile look without needing image assets.

Manga and anime fan edits

The nosebleed and vomiting-blood faces are a direct callback to anime sight-gags, useful in fan captions and reaction posts.

How to use blood kaomoji

Horror and gore roleplay

  • Reply to an injury line with ( ´ཀ` ) instead of typing out a pain description
  • Use ヽ(`д´;)/ for a panicked reaction rather than a calm fanged face
  • Close a scene with 🩸 alone when a full combo would slow the pace down

Halloween and horror captions

  • Open with 🩸 or ☠ so the theme reads instantly, even before anyone opens the post
  • Pair a fanged face with a costume photo: (ཀUཀ) reads as monstrous rather than playful
  • Keep it to one dense combo per caption; stacking several starts to overwhelm on mobile widths

Gothic and dark academia bios

  • Use a single cross like ♰ as a line divider instead of a dash
  • Add ⚰︎ at the end of a title line for a formal, morbid-humor tone
  • Avoid mixing more than two occult symbols in one line; it starts to read as clutter rather than aesthetic

Heartbreak and recovery posts

  • Lead with 💔 for the hurt, then close with ❤️‍🩹 for the healing, so the line tells a small arc
  • Use 🫀 instead of a heart emoji when the tone should read clinical rather than romantic
  • Add 🩹 alone as a quiet 'I'm okay now' sign-off

Blood Kaomoji message templates

Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.

Blood Kaomoji meanings

( ´ཀ` )

A fanged mouth on a plain face. The most recognisable blood-adjacent kaomoji, built from common punctuation plus one Tibetan letter used purely for its two-point shape.

´ཀ`

The bare fang without a bracket face. Fits inside a username or short caption where a full face would get truncated.

ཐི( ´ཀ` )ཋྀ

The fanged face wrapped in extra Tibetan vowel marks that read as ears or a hood. A denser variant for a profile header rather than inline chat.

_(´ཀ`」 ∠) _

A fanged face slumped forward, as if collapsing. Reads as 'wounded and dramatic' rather than aggressive, good for exaggerated pain jokes.

(ཀUཀ)

Fangs on both sides of a wide mouth. More monstrous than the standard fanged face, closer to a creature than a person.

🩸

The single blood drop emoji. The most literal and safest way to signal the topic when a full kaomoji would be too much.

💉

A syringe. Reads as medical or vampiric depending on context; pairs naturally with 🩸 for a blood-donation or injection joke.

🩹

An adhesive bandage. Use it after a blood or injury reference to signal the wound is already being treated, softening the tone.

🫀

An anatomical heart. More clinical than a heart emoji, so it reads as biology or horror rather than romance.

💔💔❤️‍🩹❤️‍🩹

Broken hearts followed by mending hearts. A heartbreak-then-healing arc in one line, popular in breakup or recovery captions.

A single cross glyph. The smallest gothic accent on this page, useful as a spacer or stand-in bullet in a dark-themed bio.

⚰︎

A coffin symbol. Reads as morbid-humor shorthand for 'I am done' or 'this killed me,' more often used as a reaction than literally.

A skull and crossbones. Signals danger or death bluntly; pairs with a blood drop for a straightforward warning or horror tag.

🔪ིྀ

A knife with a soft Tibetan vowel mark trailing it. The mark keeps the glyph from reading as a pure weapon emoji and gives it a decorative, aesthetic-bio feel instead.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Blood Kaomoji — background

Kaomoji are read upright, emoticons sideways

Western emoticons such as :-) developed on early ASCII systems where tilting your head was the cheapest way to see a face. Japanese users had access to a far larger character set through JIS encodings, so their faces never needed rotating. That single difference explains why kaomoji have eyes, cheeks, and arms while emoticons mostly have a mouth.

The fang is a borrowed Tibetan letter

ཀ is the Tibetan consonant ka. It has no bite or blood-related meaning in Tibetan; kaomoji culture picked it up purely because its shape reads as two sharp points inside a mouth. This is typical of the whole system: characters get recruited for their silhouette, not their linguistic role.

Copying is the whole distribution mechanism

Kaomoji spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A face becomes standard purely because enough people copied it, which is why several near-identical fanged variants circulate at once.

The vomiting-blood face is an anime sight-gag import

The slumped, collapsing pose in faces like _(´ཀ`」 ∠) _ echoes a standard manga panel: a character keeling over after a shock, drawn with a thin trickle from the mouth. Kaomoji culture flattened that panel into a single line of text.

Rare characters are why some faces break

A kaomoji renders only if the reader's device ships a font covering every character in it. Older Android builds omit large parts of Unicode, so heavily decorated combos collapse into empty boxes. Faces built from common punctuation, such as ( ´ཀ` ), have survived precisely because they demand nothing unusual.

What is blood kaomoji?

Blood kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces and symbol combos built around fangs, blood drops, wounds, and gothic accents. They are plain Unicode text, not images, so they paste and keep their look wherever text is supported.

How do I copy blood kaomoji?

Tap any face on this page and it copies to your clipboard as plain text. Paste it into a chat, bio, caption, or username the same way you would paste any other word.

What symbol makes a kaomoji look like it has fangs or is vomiting blood?

Most of these faces use ཀ, a Tibetan consonant that happens to draw two sharp points inside a mouth shape. It has no connection to Tibetan script in this use; kaomoji culture borrows it purely for its silhouette, the same way it repurposes other scripts for eyes and cheeks.

Are there blood emoji as well as blood kaomoji?

Yes. This page mixes classic bracket-style faces such as ( ´ཀ` ) with blood, syringe, and bandage emoji combos such as 🩸💉🩹. Emoji faces are more literal; kaomoji faces read as an expression or reaction.

Do blood kaomoji work on Discord, Instagram, and TikTok?

Yes. All the faces here are Unicode text, so they work anywhere text is accepted. A few of the more decorated combos use rare characters that some older Android keyboards render as empty boxes.

Why do some blood kaomoji show up as boxes or question marks?

That means the device has no font covering that character. It is a display problem on the reader's side, not a broken copy. Simpler faces such as ( ´ཀ` ) or a bare 🩸 avoid the issue entirely.

Which blood kaomoji are best for usernames?

Short ones without spaces survive character limits and trimming: ´ཀ`, ♰, and ☠ are reliable. Long emoji-heavy combos usually get cut off or stripped by platforms that restrict pictographs in names.

Are blood kaomoji only for horror content?

No. The heart, bandage, and coffin accents are used year-round in gothic, alt, and dark-academia bios that have nothing to do with actual gore. The literal fanged and vomiting faces are the ones that skew toward horror or anime sight-gags.

Can I combine blood kaomoji with text?

Yes, and it usually reads better than a face on its own. Put the face after the sentence with a single space, as in "that exam wrecked me ( ´ཀ` )", so the punctuation of the face does not collide with your own.

How many blood kaomoji are on this page?

There are 200 curated faces and symbol combos, grouped so you can jump straight to blood-themed faces, fanged and vomiting faces, heart and wound accents, blood emoji combos, gothic and occult accents, or general aesthetic accents.