prince Emoji
The 🤴 Prince emoji represents royalty, a noble character, or a playful “prince” role in text.
U+1F934
🤴 is the Prince emoji, used to suggest royalty, leadership, or a character called “prince.” It’s handy for captions, messages, and design elements that need a quick regal vibe.
prince Emoji Meaning
The 🤴 (U+1F934) Prince emoji typically conveys a royal or noble figure—someone with status, authority, or “prince-like” energy. People use it to refer directly to a prince character in stories, games, or roleplay, and to add a playful tone to statements about being in charge, feeling special, or embracing a “royal” persona. It can also fit theme-based content for parties, invitations, or event announcements with a monarchy or medieval aesthetic. Like other emoji, it works best when the surrounding text clarifies the intent, whether it’s literal (a prince) or figurative (feeling regal or important).
Common uses
- •Royalty-themed social media captions and bios
- •Character descriptions for stories, roleplay, or game dialogues
- •Party or event invites with a medieval or “royal” theme
- •Playful status updates (e.g., feeling important or leading the group)
- •Design and UI embellishments for leaderboards or “top rank” badges
Examples
🤴 Prince Emoji
- 🤴The prince is waiting in the castle courtyard 🤴
- 🤴Tonight we crown the king and his prince 🤴👑
- 🤴New character alert: Prince Lark 🤴✨
- 🤴When you finally take control of the team meeting 🤴
- 🤴Royal garden party—come dressed for your rank 🤴
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F934 | |
| HTML Entity | 🤴 | |
| HTML Code | 🤴 | |
| CSS | \1F934 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode code point for the Prince emoji?
The Prince emoji 🤴 has Unicode code point U+1F934.
How do I copy 🤴 for web or programming use?
You can copy the character directly, or use the HTML entity 🤴 or escapes like \\1F934 or \\u{1F934}.
Is 🤴 the same as a king or crown emoji?
No—🤴 is specifically the Prince figure, while king and crown emojis represent different royal concepts.
What does 🤴 usually imply in a message?
It commonly suggests royalty or a noble “prince” character, or it’s used playfully to signal feeling important or regal.