π‘ enraged face Emoji β Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F621
- Shortcode
:enraged-face:- Category
- Smileys & Emotion
- Subcategory
- negative
- Added in
- Unicode 0.6
- Also known as
- angry face emoji, rage emoji, mad emoji, red face emoji, furious emoji
What Does the enraged face Emoji π‘ Mean?
Red face, thick brows furrowed furiously, expression built entirely of anger β π‘ is the emoji of genuine rage. Not frustration, not annoyance, but the hot full-body anger that turns your face red and tightens every muscle. There's no ambiguity here.
The red face is the key detail. The color of π‘ is the color of anger β flushed, hot, blood-pressure-elevated. Every cultural depiction of a cartoon character getting very angry involves them going red, and π‘ is that exact moment. It's the point past talking, past venting, into the territory of pure fury.
In texting, π‘ signals genuine anger about something that actually warrants it. "This has been escalating for months and I'm done π‘." "The injustice of this situation is making me π‘." "Someone damaged my car and just drove away π‘." It's not everyday frustration β it's the elevated register.
That said, π‘ also appears in comedic exaggeration: being "so mad" about something inconsequential in a way that's obviously performative. "They discontinued my favorite flavor π‘." The red face applied to a trivially low stakes situation is a well-understood joke.
Gen Z uses π‘ both sincerely and in this comic-exaggeration mode. The key is that genuine π‘ tends to come with more context; theatrical π‘ tends to be brief and applied to something obviously minor.
On social media, π‘ floods posts about genuine injustice, bad service, institutional failures, and anything that activated the public's anger. It's a reliable signal in comment sections that something has genuinely upset people.
Unicode 6.0, 2010. The red color is maintained across Apple, Google, and Samsung. Apple's version has a particularly intense, thick-brow expression. All versions communicate maximum anger immediately.
Use π‘ when: genuinely angry about something significant, or ironically when something minor is being treated with theatrical outrage. Know your register.
Apple's red is particularly saturated - the face is a deep, hot red that communicates raised blood pressure with visual immediacy. Google and Samsung follow similar intense red designs. This emoji reads so strongly that it almost always warrants context when sent in personal communication - a solo enraged-face can feel alarming without something around it to clarify the target of the rage. In public social media commentary it's more comfortable because the context (a news story, a community situation, a shared frustration) makes the anger legible and appropriate. In fan communities it appears at moments of collective outrage - a bad creative decision, a perceived betrayal by an institution - where the shared fury is part of the social bonding.
How to Use π‘ enraged face Emoji
“They had the whole month to fix it and waited until the last day π‘”
“My order was completely wrong for the third time in a row π‘”
“My headphones died in the middle of the good part π‘”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F621 |
| HTML Entity | 😡 |
| CSS Code | \1F621 |
| Shortcode | :enraged-face: |
| Keywords | anger, angry, enraged, face, feels, mad, maddening, pouting, rage, red, shade, unhappy, upset |
| Unicode Version | 0.6 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does π‘ mean in texting?
π‘ means genuine rage or strong anger β the red face signals elevated, hot anger. It can also appear in comic exaggeration for minor frustrations, but the face itself communicates real, intense anger.
What's the difference between π‘ and π€?
π€ is contained frustration or proud determination β steam under control. π‘ is full red-faced rage β the control is gone. π‘ is significantly more intense and less ambiguous about which emotion it's expressing.
How is π‘ used in social justice contexts on social media?
On Twitter/X and TikTok, π‘ floods posts about genuine injustice, institutional failures, and situations that warrant public anger. It functions as a collective outrage signal that something is not acceptable.
