free-symbols
🃠

Playing Card Fool Symbol

The 🃠 symbol represents the Fool in a playing-card style icon set.

U+1F0E0

🃠 is a playing-card themed symbol labeled “PLAYING CARD FOOL” in Unicode. It’s handy for playful UI elements, card-game references, and decorative text.

Playing Card Fool Symbol Meaning

🃠 (PLAYING CARD FOOL) depicts the Fool figure in a playing-card style emoji. The most common meaning is a playful or “foolish” role—someone taking a risk, acting impulsively, or starting something with optimism and humor. Because it’s presented as a card symbol, it’s also commonly used to represent a card in games, quizzes, raffles, or storytelling beats involving a “Fool” card. In design and writing, it often works as a lighthearted marker for beginner energy, mischief, or an unexpected twist, without needing extra context.

Common uses

  • Labeling a “Fool” card in card games, quizzes, or tabletop app interfaces
  • Adding a humorous tone in chat messages and comments
  • Decorating event posts (e.g., card nights, raffles, or themed games)
  • Indicating a role or character type in stories and role-based prompts
  • Using in UI icons or badges for beginner mode, “try it” challenges, or playful status

Examples

🃠 Fool Playing Card Symbol

  • 🃠I pulled the 🃠—guess it’s time to take the weirdest option!
  • 🃠Beginner round: 🃠 is on the board today.
  • 🃠That plan was risky… but we had 🃠 energy.
  • 🃠Choose your card: 🃠, 🃁, or 🂡?
  • 🃠Story prompt unlocked: the Fool (🃠) enters the scene.

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F0E0
HTML Entity🃠
HTML Code🃠
CSS\1F0E0

FAQ

What is 🃠 called in Unicode?

It’s named “PLAYING CARD FOOL” and has the code point U+1F0E0.

How can I copy 🃠 into my project?

Copy the character directly (🃠), or use the provided escapes: HTML entity 🃠 or escapes like \\1F0E0 / \\u{1F0E0}.

What does 🃠 usually mean?

Most commonly it refers to the Fool card—often used to suggest playful risk-taking, humor, or a lighthearted “foolish” role.

Which category does 🃠 belong to?

It’s categorized under “Playing Cards.”

Related symbols