Emojis are part of our communication day to day. Interoperative compatibility is achieved thanks to the fact that they follow a common 'language' implemented by each of the operating systems on the market, known as Unicode. This character encoding standard has released a first version of its Unicode 15.1 update that will approve in september and that guides us about what the new emojis for our devices could be. A phoenix, a file, direction changes in already created emojis, a broken chain, 'yes' and 'no' movements with the head or a brown mushroom are some of the candidates to access this list.
Unicode 15.1 is preparing to land on iOS 17 with new emojis
As we have said, Unicode is a library of recommendations for multiple visual characters, including emojis. These recommendations can be strictly applied to operating systems but companies can modify the final result of the emojis. It can be verified by seeing how the Apple and Android emojis are different in their design... but they always follow a series of common characteristics that allow us to identify the idea they want to convey.
Next September Unicode will release Unicode 15.1, an update of your library with new emojis that will see the light in a future update of iOS 17. This has already happened other years with Unicode 12.1 in 2019 or Unicode 15 in September of last year. After the emoji update is released, Apple's design team it will select the new emojis and integrate them into a later operating system update. These emojis although they are not official, from the team of Emojipedia they have decided to let loose and imagine it.
This new version of Unicode brings new emojis based on the combination of two existing ones. Among them we find a feni bird