Celebration text faces for chats, invites, and captions

Party Kaomoji

Copy party kaomoji and Japanese celebration text faces for Discord, birthday messages, event invites, and festive captions.

Party Kaomoji copy and paste

199 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 200 party kaomoji text faces.

Party Kaomoji ASCII art

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

1 pieces
party ascii art3×53

Discord messages

Dancing arms and confetti faces fit quick server announcements about game nights, releases, or new members.

Birthday messages

Cake and balloon faces pair naturally with a short birthday greeting without needing an image.

Event invites

A single festive face at the top of an invite signals the tone before anyone reads the details.

Group chat hype

Repeated arm-raise faces work well as a quick reaction when good news drops in a group chat.

How to use party kaomoji

Group chat announcements

  • Open with ٩(^ᗜ^ )و ´- to signal excitement before sharing the news
  • Close a plan confirmation with ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ to keep the tone playful
  • React to good news from someone else with ٩(๑❛ᴗ❛๑)۶ rather than a plain thumbs up

Birthday messages

  • Pair (੭ˊᵕˋ)੭🎂 with a short line rather than a long paragraph
  • Use the full Happy Birthday(づ๑•ᴗ•๑)づ🎂 template when you want the message to stand on its own
  • Save the stylised Unicode banner for platforms that reliably render uncommon glyphs

Event invites

  • Lead an invite with ☆*:.。.o(≧▽≦)o.。.:*☆ to set a festive tone before the details
  • Keep a second, simpler face in reserve for platforms that strip decorative Unicode
  • Avoid stacking more than one large face in the same message; it reads as cluttered

Music and dancing

  • Use └(°◡°)┐ 🎵 ┌(^◡^)┘ when the message is specifically about a playlist or dance floor
  • Combine with a short caption rather than relying on the face alone to carry meaning
  • Reserve the longer chained versions for captions rather than quick replies

Party Kaomoji message templates

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

Party Kaomoji meanings

٩(^ᗜ^ )و ´-

Two raised fists framing a closed-eye grin. The default party kaomoji for pumping up a group chat before an event.

(ノ^ヮ^)ノ*:・゚✧

An arm thrown up with sparkles trailing behind it, close to throwing confetti. Works as a stand-alone celebration reaction.

٩(ˊᗜˋ*)و

A softer version of the fist-pump face, better suited to a warm congratulations than a loud cheer.

ヾ( ˃ᴗ˂ )◞ • *✰

A bright grin with a trailing star, useful for closing out an invite or announcement on a hopeful note.

└(^o^)┐

Arms held out sideways in a shrug-dance pose. Reads as loose, silly fun rather than formal excitement.

ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ

A running or dancing figure with arms raised. Common as a reaction gif substitute when someone announces plans.

( ˶ˆᗜˆ˵ ),٩(ˊᗜˋ*)و ♡

Two grinning faces side by side, suited to messages celebrating a shared win rather than one person's news.

٩(๑❛ᴗ❛๑)۶

A wide-eyed, excited grin with both arms up. Reads as genuine surprise plus celebration, good for unexpected good news.

(੭ˊᵕˋ)੭🎂

A soft face reaching toward a cake emoji, built specifically for birthday greetings rather than generic celebration.

Happy Birthday(づ๑•ᴗ•๑)づ🎂

A full birthday message wrapped around a hugging kaomoji and cake. Copy it whole or lift just the face.

☆*:.。.o(≧▽≦)o.。.:*☆

A wide laughing face framed by sparkle asterisks, common as a header for party invites or event posts.

└(°◡°)┐ 🎵 ┌(^◡^)┘

Two dancing figures with a music note between them, built for messages about music, dancing, or a party playlist.

🎉🎈 ℋ̊𝗮̥𝗽̊𝗽̥𝘆 🎂 ℬ̊𝗶̥𝗿̊𝘁̥𝗵̊𝗱̥𝗮̊𝘆 🎈🎉

A stylised Unicode birthday banner. Renders wherever the font ships the required characters; keep a plain fallback nearby for unsupported apps.

🪩🫧🍸🥂🫧✧˖°

A disco-ball and cocktail emoji chain rather than a text face, useful for nightlife or club-themed invites.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Party 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 brackets are borrowed from other alphabets

Characters that look purpose-built for expressive faces are usually loaned. ᐅ is Canadian Aboriginal syllabics and 𝗇-style glyphs come from styled math alphanumerics. Nobody designed them for kaomoji; the community simply found shapes that read as arms, ears, and motion.

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 dancing or cheering faces circulate at once.

Repeated arm gestures signal group celebration

Party kaomoji frequently chain two faces together, such as ٩( ᐖ )人( ᐘ )و, to represent more than one person celebrating at once. This paired-face convention is uncommon outside party and greeting kaomoji, which are almost always drawn as a single figure.

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 party faces with sparkle marks or styled letters can collapse into empty boxes while a plain face like └(^o^)┐ keeps working everywhere.

What is party kaomoji?

Party kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces built from ordinary Unicode characters that show raised arms, dancing poses, confetti, or cake to signal celebration. Unlike emoji, they are plain text, so they paste and keep their look wherever text is supported.

How do I copy party kaomoji?

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

Are party kaomoji the same as party emoji?

No. Party emoji such as 🎉 are single image characters rendered by the operating system. Party kaomoji are sequences of existing punctuation and letters, so they always render as text and never break into a missing-glyph box on older devices.

Which party kaomoji works best for a birthday message?

Faces built around a cake emoji, like (ออˊᵕˋ)ออ🎂, read clearly as birthday-specific rather than generic celebration.

Can I use party kaomoji on Discord?

Yes. Discord renders kaomoji as plain text in any channel or DM, so dancing and confetti faces work well for announcements, event pings, and reactions.

Why do some party kaomoji show boxes instead of the face?

A kaomoji only renders correctly if the reader's device has a font covering every character in it. Faces that combine rare symbols are more likely to break on older phones than faces built from common punctuation.

What does (ノˊᗜˋ*)و mean?

It shows two raised fists around a closed-eye grin, the most common party kaomoji for hyping up a group chat before or during an event.

Is there a party kaomoji for dancing?

Yes. Faces such as ᐕ(ᐅᐋ)ᐗ and └(^^)┐ show a figure with arms out in a dance pose and are used as stand-ins for a dancing gif.

Can party kaomoji include ASCII art?

Occasionally. A small number of larger multi-line party kaomoji exist, built with the same character set, though most party faces are single-line.