Open + Vector = awesome!
- Google Noto - the complete set from Android (source).
- Twitter Twemoji - a complete set, licensed CC-BY 4.0 but with easy attribution requirements (source).
- Microsoft Fluent - complete set with multiple flavors (source)
- OpenMoji - consistent line-oriented images, including some custom extras. Licensed CC BY-SA-4 (source).
- Mozilla's Firefox OS - very nice, but no longer being updated (source).
- EmojiTwo - a fork of the last open version of EmojiOne. Only a few updates since, but still pretty good source.
- Emojidex aka PhantomOpenEmoji (source).
- Streamline's Kawaii (freemium, only low-res for free) and Freemoji (freemium, attribution required for free use)
Straight from the horse's mouth
- Comparison table - all the emoji except skin-tone variations, with images for each major platform.
- Skin-tone comparison table the emoji missing from the above chart, with images for each major platform.
- Recent additions - list of what's new. Usually not supported on all the platforms yet.
- List - just a single sample image, but with the official name and alternate names/keywords for each emoji.
- Counts - so you know that there are 3,782 distinct emoji (as of June 2023).
- Unicode Technical Standard 51 - all the gory technical details. A bit dry, unless you are a emoji geek (which you definitely are if you have read this far!).
- Emojipedia - great reference site, with images for all the plaforms (including historical), but only
png
and no links to the sources. - Wikipedia's Emoji Page - lists all the emoji with sample images from the major open platforms (including historical versions).
- Github API JSON - a
json
file that maps to a URL of apng
image. - Unicode emoji data files - the raw data, in case you are developing something from scratch.
- EmojiCopy - a decent copy-to-clipboard site.
- Emoji-cheat-sheet - another copy-to-clipboard site, though not updated in 4 years (source).