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๐Ÿƒœ

Playing Card Knight Of Clubs Symbol

๐Ÿƒœ represents the Knight of Clubs playing card in the Unicode Playing Cards set.

U+1F0DC

The ๐Ÿƒœ emoji is the Unicode โ€œPLAYING CARD KNIGHT OF CLUBSโ€ symbol. Itโ€™s commonly used where playing-card suits and ranks are shown. You can copy it directly or use its Unicode code point in software.

Playing Card Knight Of Clubs Symbol Meaning

๐Ÿƒœ (PLAYING CARD KNIGHT OF CLUBS, U+1F0DC) depicts the Knight card for the Clubs suit. In practice, it signals a specific playing-card rank and suit, making it useful for card game messages, summaries, or UI elements. Because itโ€™s a real Unicode playing-card character, it can be used consistently across platforms that support the glyph. People often use it in contexts that reference strategy, tournaments, decks, or โ€œcard themedโ€ posts, menus, and iconsโ€”especially when they want an accurate suit-and-rank representation rather than a generic playing card.

Common uses

  • โ€ขLabeling a game state such as โ€œKnight of Clubsโ€ in a card app or tutorial
  • โ€ขDesigning deck lists, card inventories, or trading/tracking posts
  • โ€ขCreating social captions for card-based games, streams, or challenges
  • โ€ขUsing in menus or badges for โ€œClubโ€ themed events or rewards
  • โ€ขIllustrating examples in writing about card hands or match results

Examples

๐Ÿƒœ Knight of Clubs Playing Card

  • ๐ŸƒœI drew ๐Ÿƒœ and built a strong midgame plan.
  • ๐ŸƒœTonightโ€™s reward card is ๐Ÿƒœ โ€” congrats to the winner!
  • ๐ŸƒœHand check: ๐Ÿƒœ plus two hearts.
  • ๐ŸƒœMatch update: you played ๐Ÿƒœ. Whatโ€™s your follow-up?
  • ๐ŸƒœDeck list complete: included one ๐Ÿƒœ.

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F0DC
HTML Entity🃜
HTML Code🃜
CSS\1F0DC

FAQ

What does ๐Ÿƒœ mean?

๐Ÿƒœ is the Unicode character for the โ€œKnight of Clubsโ€ in the Playing Cards set.

What is the Unicode code point for ๐Ÿƒœ?

Its Unicode code point is U+1F0DC.

How can I copy ๐Ÿƒœ into HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: 🃜.

Can I use ๐Ÿƒœ in JavaScript?

Yes. You can use the JavaScript escape: \\u{1F0DC}.