A smiley with dark circles under the eyes, a fingerprint, root vegetables and a harp: whoever missed these emojis to beautify chats and emails will be happy in 2025. The Unicode Consortium has selected these motifs to expand the existing emoji image set. version 16.0Whose specifications were already made public in September 2024, but which include some more motifs that are expected in the first operating system in the spring.
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A total of eight emojis were selected to add. In addition to those mentioned at the beginning, these also include a kind of ink stain, a shovel, a leafless tree and the flag of the Channel Island of Sark, which is located between Great Britain and France – who would have ever thought that. How it Looks Like may also add this to its emoji in the future.

Multi-Step Entry Process
Adding new emoji is a multi-step process. Anyone interested can submit an application for new emoji to the Unicode Consortium. It is expected that these are motifs that are likely to be used frequently and are different from existing emoji. Approved suggestions are then incorporated into the standard, although the consortium only specifies the exact graphic design.
In the next step, it is up to manufacturers and developers from different platforms like Google, Apple, and Microsoft to create designs for emojis and make them available through software updates. This process is at the discretion of the manufacturer – as a result, there is usually a transition period during which emojis do not display correctly when they are sent from a device with a previously updated operating system to a user with an older OS .
Is AI the future of emoji?
While the Unicode Consortium is already collecting suggestions for version 17, thanks to artificial intelligence, users are being given the opportunity to easily design their own emoji. For example, with Apple Intelligence, Apple is introducing the Genmoji function at the operating system level, making it possible to easily describe the desired motif in the system. Positive side effects: Unlike Unicode, it is not anchored in the character set, so Genmoji is shipped as a generic image motif and therefore appears even on non-Apple devices or older models. There are also offers on the web that allow you to create your own emoji.
(MKI)
