A devilish angry face with horns and a tail. The Ψ on the left is a Greek letter repurposed as devil horns — three prongs sticking up. The face has ` and ´ angled-down narrowed eyes, an _ flat-line mouth (set jaw), and a # crosshatch on the cheek marking an angry vein or scrunched skin. Outside, ↝ is a curved arrow tail flicking outward.
The Ψ-as-horns convention is one of the cleverest reuses of Greek letters in kaomoji. Combined with the # vein-pop on the cheek, the whole face reads as deliberately mischievous-anger — not just upset, but plotting. The tail tip ↝ adds movement: the character is twitching with irritation.
Use it for playful-angry contexts: complaining about a minor inconvenience, mock-anger at a friend who pranked you, expressing fed-up energy in a way that signals you are not actually furious. On Discord and Twitter/X it works for jokey complaints. On TikTok captions it suits “my reaction when” content where the situation is annoying but not serious. Avoid it for genuinely heated moments — the devil framing makes the anger feel theatrical.
In Japanese the matching mood is ぷんすか (punsuka — irritated huffing) with a devilish twist, or いじわる (ijiwaru — mean/mischievous). Pair this kaomoji with phrases like もー! (‘mō!’ — “argh!”), やられた (‘yarareta’ — “got me”), or ふざけんな〜 (‘fuzakenna~’ — “don’t mess with me~” said jokingly).