
Japanese “here” button
Japanese “here” button — Symbols emoji.
Japanese “here” button
Symbols
Alphanum
U+1F201
1F201
v6.0
v6.0+
japanese-here-button-1f201
Shortcodes
:koko::“here”::japanese::japanese_“here”_button::katakana::ココ:Themes
Download as image
Renders 🈁 with your system emoji font into PNG, WebP, or SVG. Pick a pixel size, then download.
Note: PNG and WebP use the emoji font installed on your device (Apple Color Emoji on macOS/iOS, Segoe UI Emoji on Windows, Noto Color Emoji on Android/Linux), so the look matches your platform. SVG embeds the character as text — rendering depends on the viewer.
Microsoft Fluent UI Emoji — pixel-perfect originals
Download Microsoft's official Fluent rendering of 🈁. SVG files are vector (scales to any size); the 3D PNG is 1024×1024.
About the 🈁 Japanese “here” button emoji
The 🈁 Japanese “here” button emoji is part of the Symbols category and the alphanum group on DBEmoji. Shortcodes such as :koko:, :“here”:, and :japanese: resolve to this emoji on platforms like Slack, Discord, and GitHub.
Japanese “here” button (Unicode codepoint U+1F201) japanese “here” button — Symbols emoji.. The 🈁 Japanese “here” button glyph belongs to Symbols, specifically the Alphanum cluster. Symbol emojis like 🈁 read more like icons than illustrations; they fit professional copy without feeling casual. 🈁 occupies codepoint U+1F201 in the Unicode emoji block. Coverage started with Unicode 6.0; iOS adopted the glyph in 6.0. Typing `:koko:` or `:“here”:` or `:japanese:` in chat apps usually expands to 🈁. The glyph renders mostly in blue, which puts it inside the matching color filter. Tag-wise it sits alongside “here”, japanese, and katakana emojis. One tap on 🈁 is all it takes — the glyph copies straight to your clipboard.
When to use 🈁 Japanese “here” button
- Adding visual context to social posts, chats, and captions
- Replacing stock images with a single expressive character
- Brightening short copy where text-only feels too plain
Combinations and pairings
- Pair 🈁 with “here”-themed, japanese-themed, and katakana-themed emojis to reinforce the same vibe in one message.
- Lead a caption with 🈁 for a quick visual hook, or close a sentence with it as a reaction.
How to copy the 🈁 Japanese “here” button emoji
- Open the emoji page. Visit the Japanese “here” button emoji page on DBEmoji to see the character, codepoint, and meaning side by side.
- Tap Copy emoji. Click the "Copy emoji" button. The 🈁 character is placed on your clipboard instantly — no signup, no download.
- Paste anywhere. Paste into any chat app, social network, document, or text field that supports Unicode. The emoji renders using the platform's native style.
Frequently asked questions
- What does the 🈁 Japanese “here” button emoji mean?
- The 🈁 Japanese “here” button glyph belongs to Symbols, specifically the Alphanum cluster. Symbol emojis like 🈁 read more like icons than illustrations; they fit professional copy without feeling casual. 🈁 occupies codepoint U+1F201 in the Unicode emoji block. Coverage started with Unicode 6.0; iOS adopted the glyph in 6.0. Typing `:koko:` or `:“here”:` or `:japanese:` in chat apps usually expands to 🈁. The glyph renders mostly in blue, which puts it inside the matching color filter. Tag-wise it sits alongside “here”, japanese, and katakana emojis. One tap on 🈁 is all it takes — the glyph copies straight to your clipboard.
- What is the Unicode codepoint for Japanese “here” button?
- The 🈁 Japanese “here” button emoji is encoded as U+1F201 (hex 1F201). It belongs to the Alphanum group inside Symbols.
- How do I copy the 🈁 emoji?
- Open this page and click "Copy emoji". The 🈁 character is copied to your clipboard so you can paste it into any app that supports Unicode emojis.
- Does Japanese “here” button have shortcodes?
- Yes. Common shortcodes include :koko:, :“here”:, :japanese:, and :japanese_“here”_button:. Platforms like Slack, Discord, and GitHub render these as the 🈁 emoji automatically.
This emoji goes great with
Curated combos that read well next to 🈁 in messages, posts, and captions.
More Alphanum
Closely related emojis from the same alphanum group.
