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Google is open-sourcing its 3D emoji

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Why This Matters

Google's decision to open-source its 3D emoji set marks a significant step towards more immersive and customizable digital expressions, enabling developers and creators to incorporate these models into VR, apps, and memes. This move promotes innovation and collaboration within the tech community, potentially transforming how we use emojis across various platforms.

Key Takeaways

is the Verge’s weekend editor. He’s covered the tech industry for over 18 years and knows a thing or two about synths.

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Now, if you want to, you can use Google’s 3D emoji in your own creations. The company shared some details about how it went about designing the little pictograms and why, as part of World Emoji Day on Friday. Things you might not necessarily worry about in a 2D illustration suddenly become very important when you’re talking about a 3D model. Is a smiley face a sphere? A mask? A flat disc?

In addition to offering a behind-the-scenes look at Google’s design process, it also announced that it would be completely open-sourcing the emoji set:

We’re handing over raw .OBJ files to the community so they can use them to build immersive VR worlds, indie apps or weird memes.

Exactly what kind of “immersive VR worlds” someone might want to build with a bunch of emojis is a bit of a mystery to me. But if the Emoji Movie is any indication, it won’t be good. Google’s Noto Emoji 3D made their debut in May and were met with 😬 reactions.