Playing Card Queen Of Spades Symbol
The 🂭 symbol represents the Queen of Spades playing card.
U+1F0AD
🂭 is the Unicode character for the Queen of Spades playing card (U+1F0AD). You can copy it for card games, UI elements, and game-related content. Below are practical uses and easy copy variations.
Playing Card Queen Of Spades Symbol Meaning
The 🂭 symbol depicts the Queen of Spades from a standard deck of playing cards. In most contexts, it’s used as a visual shorthand for the card itself—common in card games, digital decks, and game states (for example, showing a held card or a winner’s card). It can also work as a design accent for projects that need a “spade” theme, such as poker- or strategy-game branding, card-based UI, or decorative listings of card ranks. Because it’s a specific card, it’s best suited when you want to communicate “Queen of Spades” directly rather than just “a playing card.”
Common uses
- •Displaying the Queen of Spades in a digital deck or card gallery
- •Showing game state in poker-like or card-based interfaces
- •Labeling UI elements such as “Queen of Spades” slots or achievements
- •Using as a decorative icon for card-game themed menus and dashboards
- •Writing fiction or dialogue where a character references this exact card
Examples
🂭 Queen of Spades Playing Card
- 🂭I drew 🂭 and flipped it face up.
- 🂭Your opponent played 🂭.
- 🂭Collection: Queen of Spades 🂭
- 🂭Game over—final card was 🂭.
- 🂭Place 🂭 into the Queen’s slot.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F0AD | |
| HTML Entity | 🂭 | |
| HTML Code | 🂭 | |
| CSS | \1F0AD |
FAQ
What does 🂭 stand for?
🂭 is the Unicode symbol for the Queen of Spades playing card (U+1F0AD).
How can I copy and paste the symbol?
Copy the character 🂭 directly from this page. You can also paste the HTML entity 🂭 or the escapes shown for developers.
What are the official code values for 🂭?
Unicode code point: U+1F0AD. HTML entity: 🂭. CSS escape: \\1F0AD. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F0AD}.
Will the symbol look the same on every device?
The character is standardized, but its appearance can vary slightly by font and platform since playing-card glyphs depend on the available emoji/font styles.