Happy text faces for cheerful replies, bios, and captions

Happy Kaomoji

Copy happy kaomoji, smiling Japanese text faces, excited reactions, cheerful symbols, and cute celebration faces for Discord, Instagram, TikTok, Roblox, and everyday messages.

Happy Kaomoji copy and paste

130 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 130 happy kaomoji text faces.

Discord messages

Use happy kaomoji for quick reactions in servers, DMs, and group chats.

Instagram bios

Short happy text faces and symbols can add personality without taking too much profile space.

TikTok captions

Add happy kaomoji around names, mood captions, edits, and short posts.

Roblox names

Compact happy kaomoji are easier to fit into display names and short profile text.

How to use happy kaomoji

Everyday chat

  • (。•ᴗ•。) sounds warm with no effort
  • (˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶) reads as sincere thanks rather than sarcasm
  • Keep arms and stars for news that deserves them

Celebrating good news

  • ٩(ˊᗜˋ*)و ♡ puts both arms in the air
  • ヾ(≧∇≦)ゞ is louder still and reads as delighted chaos
  • ⸜(*ˊᗜˋ*)⸝ celebrates on someone else's behalf

Laughing at something

  • ꉂ(˵˃ ᗜ ˂˵) is actively laughing, not just smiling
  • (,,>ヮ<,,) opens the mouth wider than a ᵕ smile
  • (⁠≧⁠▽⁠≦⁠) is the safest laugh on old devices

Usernames and bios

  • Short faces with no spaces survive trimming
  • >ᴗ< fits inside tight character limits
  • Test on mobile; rare characters can fall back to boxes

Happy Kaomoji message templates

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

Happy Kaomoji meanings

(˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶)

A soft, closed-eye smile. The workhorse happy face for friendly replies and casual thanks.

(˶ˆᗜˆ˵)

The same soft face with a wider grin. Pleased without being loud.

(。•ᴗ•。)

A round, undecorated smile. It survives platforms that mangle rarer characters.

(⁠≧⁠▽⁠≦⁠)

Scrunched eyes and an open mouth. Classic, widely recognised delight.

٩(ˊᗜˋ*)و ♡

Both arms in the air. Celebration rather than a simple smile.

ヾ(≧∇≦)ゞ

Waving arms on both sides. Reads as excitement bordering on chaos.

(˶>⩊<˶)

Eyes squeezed shut with an open mouth. Delight, or mild embarrassment in context.

>ᴗ<

The bracket-free minimum. Fits inside usernames where longer faces get truncated.

◝(ᵔᵕᵔ)◜

A small shrug-and-smile. Contentment with a hint of modesty.

(๑>ᴗ<๑)

A bright smile framed by round cheeks. Warmer than the plain version.

⸜(*ˊᗜˋ*)⸝

Raised arms with sparkling cheeks. Happiness on someone else's behalf.

(,,>ヮ<,,)

An open, gleeful mouth. Louder than the ᵕ-mouth faces.

ꉂ(˵˃ ᗜ ˂˵)

The ꉂ prefix is a laugh line, so this face is actively laughing.

₍₍⚞(˶˃ ꒳ ˂˶)⚟⁾⁾

Doubled brackets imply wiggling. Excitement rather than a calm smile.

(⌒▽⌒)☆

A cheerful open smile with a star. Upbeat and a little theatrical.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Happy Kaomoji — background

Kaomoji are read upright, emoticons sideways

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

Tone comes from context, not the face

The same face can read as sincere or sarcastic depending on the sentence it follows. Kaomoji carry no fixed meaning the way a traffic sign does; they modify the sentence they are attached to, much as tone of voice modifies speech.

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 variants of the same expression circulate at once.

The arms came from the shift to wider encodings

Early emoticons had no arms because ASCII offered nothing that read as one. Characters such as ٩ and و are Arabic-Indic digits, and ヾ is katakana. Once Japanese phones shipped these fonts by default, faces gained bodies almost overnight.

Mouth shape does most of the work

Across the whole happy family, the eyes barely change: some variation of ˃ ˂ or ᵔ ᵔ. Nearly all the difference between contentment, laughter, and celebration is carried by the mouth and by whether arms are present.

What is happy kaomoji?

Happy kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces that show smiling, laughing, and celebrating using ordinary Unicode characters rather than images.

How do I copy happy kaomoji?

Tap any face on this page and it copies as plain text. Paste it into a chat, bio, caption, or username.

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

Yes. They are Unicode text, so they work anywhere text is accepted.

What is the difference between a smile and an excited face?

Mouth shape carries most of it. A ᵕ or ᴗ mouth reads as calm contentment; an open ▽ or ヮ mouth, or raised arms such as ٩ and و, reads as excitement.

Which happy kaomoji are best for usernames?

Short ones without spaces: >ᴗ<, (˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶), and (。•ᴗ•。). Faces with arms usually get truncated.

Why do some faces show as boxes?

The reader's device lacks a font covering that character. Simpler faces such as (⁠≧⁠▽⁠≦⁠) avoid the problem.

Can a happy kaomoji read as sarcastic?

Yes. Tone comes from the sentence it follows. (˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶) after a complaint reads very differently from the same face after thanks.

What does ꉂ mean in front of a face?

It is a laugh line borrowed from Yi script. Placed before a face it suggests the person is actively laughing rather than merely smiling.

How do I combine a happy kaomoji with text?

Put it after the sentence with a single space, so the brackets of the face do not collide with your own punctuation.

How many happy kaomoji are on this page?

There are 130 curated faces, grouped into smiles, excited reactions, cute faces, and aesthetic accents.