π§ anguished face Emoji β Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F627
- Shortcode
:anguished-face:- Category
- Smileys & Emotion
- Subcategory
- concerned
- Added in
- Unicode 1.0
- Also known as
- distressed face emoji, anguished emoji, pained face emoji, concerned distressed emoji
What Does the anguished face Emoji π§ Mean?
Eyes wide with concern, eyebrows arched, mouth open in distress β π§ is the emoji of genuine emotional pain. It's a step up from π¦ in intensity: not just dismay, but real anguish. The face looks like someone watching something difficult unfold and feeling it deeply.
In texting, π§ covers serious distress. Bad medical news in the family β π§. Watching a friend go through something hard β π§. Hearing about a tragedy β π§. It works for moments where polite-shock emojis would feel inadequate but full-cry emojis would feel performative. The combination of arched brows and open mouth captures sincere emotional pain.
There's a sympathetic register that π§ does particularly well. When someone shares heavy news and you want to convey real care, π§ communicates "this is hitting me, I'm with you in this." It's more emotionally available than π (worried) and more present than π¦ (dismayed). The face is actively distressed in a way that makes it feel like the speaker is reacting genuinely.
It also works for personal anguish. "Got the news that they're closing the office π§" β distressed but processing. "My grandfather is in the hospital π§" β sincere alarm. The emoji is heavy enough to carry weight without crossing into crying or panic territory.
On social media, π§ shows up in serious comment threads, news reactions, and supportive replies to difficult posts. It's less common than the louder emotional emojis, but it has a precise niche β sincere anguish that doesn't need to perform. Twitter/X uses it in earnest reactions to heavy stories. Instagram comments use it under difficult life updates.
Apple renders the anguished brows clearly arched, the mouth open in distress. Google's version is similar with slightly more dramatic styling. Samsung's leans softer. The earnest pain reads across platforms.
Emoji 1.0 added π§ in 2015 to expand the spectrum of concerned faces. It sits in a real gap β heavier than worry, lighter than full crying or panic β and the niche has held up.
Use π§ for genuine emotional pain, sincere anguish, distressed-but-functioning moments, and moments when sympathetic reactions need real weight. Skip it for casual situations where the depth would feel mismatched.
How to Use π§ anguished face Emoji
“Heard about the layoffs at your company π§”
“Just read the news and I'm not okay π§”
“She's been crying all night, I don't know what to do π§”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F627 |
| HTML Entity | 😧 |
| CSS Code | \1F627 |
| Shortcode | :anguished-face: |
| Keywords | anguished, face, forgot, scared, scary, stressed, surprise, unhappy, what, wow |
| Unicode Version | 1.0 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does π§ mean?
The π§ emoji means anguished or genuinely distressed. The arched eyebrows and open mouth convey real emotional pain β used for sincere anguish, sympathetic reactions, and moments of heavy concern.
How is π§ different from π?
π is worried β concerned but composed. π§ is anguished β actively distressed with an open mouth. π fits low-grade concern; π§ fits serious emotional pain that still hasn't broken into full crying.
