Devious Kaomoji
Copy devious kaomoji and smirking text faces for teasing messages, sly comments, and mischievous reactions.
Popular devious kaomoji
Short, readable faces are usually the best fit for bios, usernames, and chat replies.
Devious Kaomoji copy and paste
195 text faces shown in All.
Devious Kaomoji ASCII art
Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.
Teasing chat replies
Send a sly, smirking kaomoji when playfully teasing a friend or reacting to a joke with a knowing grin.
Plotting or scheming captions
Use a devious face on posts about pulling a prank, planning a surprise, or hinting at a secret.
Sarcastic reactions
Pair a smirking text face with a sarcastic comment to make the tone clearly playful rather than harsh.
Villain-style roleplay chats
Use exaggerated devious kaomoji in roleplay or fandom chats where a mischievous or villain-like character is being portrayed.
How to use devious kaomoji
Teasing a friend
- Use a small smirk face after a playful jab in chat.
- Keep the message light so the teasing reads as friendly.
- Pair with an emoji-free follow-up line to soften the tone.
Prank or surprise planning
- Use the trident-marked face when hinting at a secret plan.
- Add it right before revealing a surprise for extra flair.
- Save the more exaggerated versions for close friends who get the joke.
Sarcastic comments
- Pair a smug face with a clearly sarcastic sentence.
- Use sparingly so the sarcasm doesn't get misread as rude.
- Works best in casual, familiar chat threads.
Roleplay and fandom chats
- Use the more dramatic, gesture-heavy faces for villain-style characters.
- Combine with in-character dialogue for full effect.
- Reserve these for chats where the exaggerated tone fits the context.
Devious Kaomoji message templates
Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.
Devious Kaomoji meanings
( ˋ⁻̫ˊ) Ψ
A slanted smirk with a trident-like mark beside it, giving an exaggerated scheming or villainous feel.
•̀⩊•́
A small closed-eye smirk shape often read as quietly smug or self-satisfied.
(๑`꒳´๑)
A confident grin with raised brows, suggesting a proud, mischievous smile.
( •̀ᴗ•́ )و ̑̑
An energetic face with a fist-pump gesture, reading as gleeful scheming or triumphant mischief.
ꉂ (`ω´)ᯞ
A determined smirking face paired with a laughing mark, suggesting someone enjoying their own clever plan.
¬‿¬
A minimal slanted-eyebrow glyph that reads as a quick smug or knowing look.
“ψ(`∇´)ψ
A face with a trident mark in quotes, suggesting an exaggerated or quoted 'evil laugh' moment.
ψ(`∇´)ψ
The same trident-marked face without quotes, used for a straightforward mischievous or scheming tone.
(๑>•̀๑)
A tilted, narrow-eyed face suggesting sly satisfaction or a knowing side-glance.
৻( •̀ ᗜ •́ ৻)
A face with narrowed eyes and a wide mouth, reading as a playful, slightly smug grin.
(¬、¬)
A simple sideways-glance face suggesting quiet suspicion or a knowing smirk.
↜₍^ > w <^₎ Ψ
An arrow-framed face with a trident mark, giving a dramatic, exaggerated scheming pose.
(¬‿¬)凸
A smug face paired with a raised-fist gesture, suggesting triumphant or gloating mischief.
Related kaomoji
Keep browsing nearby text face collections.
Devious Kaomoji — background
Slant tells the tone
A slight slant in the eyes or brows is often enough to shift a neutral kaomoji face into a sly, devious one.
Gestures add drama
Adding a fist-pump or trident-like symbol next to a smirking face pushes the expression toward exaggerated, villain-style mischief.
Context changes the read
The same smirking face can read as friendly teasing or genuine scheming depending entirely on the message around it.
What is devious kaomoji used for?
Devious kaomoji are sly, smirking text faces used to convey teasing, scheming, or mischievous intent in a message.
Is devious kaomoji meant to look angry?
No, the expression leans toward playful mischief or smugness rather than genuine anger.
When should I use a devious kaomoji?
They fit well in teasing replies, prank-planning captions, sarcastic comments, and playful roleplay chats.
What makes a kaomoji look devious?
Slanted eyes, raised or asymmetric brows, and a smirking mouth shape are the key features that create the sly look.
Can devious kaomoji be used in friendly conversations?
Yes, when paired with an obviously joking message, they read as playful teasing rather than hostility.
Are there devious kaomoji with extra gestures?
Yes, some versions add a fist-pump or trident-like mark for a more animated, exaggerated scheming look.
How do I copy a devious kaomoji?
Tap or click the kaomoji card to copy it instantly, then paste it into your chat or caption.
Do devious kaomoji work well in captions?
Yes, a single smirking face at the end of a caption can hint at mischief without needing extra explanation.