A face on a video call sending hearts to another face. The first face (left) has πΈ cherry-blossom hair decoration, κ closed-content eye, Π Cyrillic letter used as a puckered kiss-mouth, β€ a red heart sent forward. Then π» a laptop emoji and β¨ sparkles and β‘ hearts in the middle β the video call connection. Another π»β‘β‘ second laptop with hearts. Finally the second face (right) has ββΏβ wide-bullet eyes with a small smile, β° a star decoration on the cheek.
This kaomoji uses Unicode emoji (πΈ π» β¨ β€) alongside traditional kaomoji glyphs β a hybrid style common in 2018+ kawaii kaomoji. The scene depicts two friends on a video call, sending hearts back and forth through their laptops. It is an unmistakable visual metaphor for online connection in the pandemic era.
Use it for long-distance friend posts, video-call moments, missing-each-other-but-staying-connected content. On Instagram captions it works for screenshots of FaceTime / Zoom calls with friends. On Twitter/X it suits “thinking of my long-distance friends” tweets. On Discord it works in cross-timezone friend group channels.
In Japanese the matching mood is γ³γ§γγ€γγ (bideo tsΕ«wa β video call) or γͺγ’γΌγγ¨γγ γ‘ (rimΕto tomodachi β remote-friends). Pair with phrases like γγγͺγγ¦γγγ£γγ (‘we’re together even when apart’), γΎγγγ―γͺγγγγ (‘let’s talk again’), or γͺγ³γ©γ€γ³γ§γγͺγγγ (‘best friends online too’).