π dragon Emoji β Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F409
- Shortcode
:dragon:- Category
- Animals & Nature
- Subcategory
- reptiles
- Added in
- Unicode 1.0
- Also known as
- chinese dragon, long dragon, fantasy dragon
What Does the dragon Emoji π Mean?
Long, sinuous, often with whiskers and flowing body β the full dragon emoji is in the East Asian style, distinct from the cartoonish Western-style dragon face. From Unicode 6.0, it's used heavily for Chinese cultural content, Lunar New Year (especially Year of the Dragon, considered the most auspicious sign), Asian heritage posts, and fantasy content broadly. It also shows up in Game of Thrones, Dungeons & Dragons, and How to Train Your Dragon references.
The serpentine design is gorgeous and instantly distinguishable from the head-only version. Pair with red lanterns or fireworks for Lunar New Year, or with castles and swords for Western fantasy. A versatile, visually striking pick.
The House of the Dragon HBO series gave it a major usage boost in the early 2020s, with fans live-tweeting episodes using this emoji heavily. Chinese dragon dance content during Lunar New Year is also a major use case. Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion (the GoT dragons) plus Drogon's children in House of the Dragon all anchor a generation of dragon emoji users.
How to Use π dragon Emoji
“Year of the π β strength and good fortune”
“Drogon supremacy π (House of the Dragon vibes)”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F409 |
| HTML Entity | 🐉 |
| CSS Code | \1F409 |
| Shortcode | :dragon: |
| Keywords | animal, fairy, fairytale, knights, tale, dragon |
| Unicode Version | 1.0 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does π mean?
It's the full-body dragon emoji (East Asian style) β used for Lunar New Year, Chinese culture, and fantasy.
