Spellcasting and witchy text faces for chats, bios, and captions

Magic Kaomoji

Copy magic kaomoji, spellcasting text faces, wand and crystal ball symbols, and witchy Japanese emoticons for Discord, Instagram, TikTok, X, and everyday messages.

Magic Kaomoji copy and paste

196 text faces shown in All.

Showing: All
Showing 200 magic kaomoji text faces.

Magic Kaomoji ASCII art

Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.

4 pieces
spell cast8×53

Discord roleplay

Spellcasting gestures and wand symbols mark magical actions clearly in fantasy or tabletop-style servers.

Instagram captions

Crystal ball and sparkle clusters work as quick visual shorthand for tarot, fortune, or 'manifesting' posts.

TikTok and X posts

Compact witchy emoji combos fit inline with captions without needing an image.

Usernames and bios

Short entries like the wand alone or a crystal ball keep a magical theme without crowding a name field.

How to use magic kaomoji

Discord roleplay

  • Open a spell action with ଘ(∩^o^)⊃━☆゜ before describing the effect
  • Drop 🪄 inline when a short magical gesture happens mid-sentence
  • Pair a face with an emoji cluster like 🔮✨🪄 when your server allows both

Tarot and fortune posts

  • Use 🔮✨🪄 to open a reading or prediction post
  • Close with 🔮 alone when you want a quieter, more serious tone
  • Keep the rest of the caption plain text so the crystal ball symbol stands out

Dark fantasy or horror captions

  • 🧙‍♂️💀🔥 signals chaotic or villain-coded magic rather than a friendly spell
  • Combine with skull, chain, or fog emoji clusters already in this list for a heavier mood
  • Avoid pairing dark-magic faces with soft heart kaomoji in the same line, the tones clash

Protection and good-luck messages

  • 🪬 reads as a warding charm, use it for 'sending protection' messages
  • Good for wishing someone luck before an exam, trip, or interview
  • Works well alone without extra decoration, since the amulet symbol already carries the meaning

Magic Kaomoji message templates

Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.

Magic Kaomoji meanings

ଘ(∩^o^)⊃━☆゜

A witch or sprite flinging a star out from cupped hands. The classic 'casting a spell' gesture kaomoji, good for any message about making something happen.

╰( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡° )つ──☆*:・゚

A smug lenny-style face pulling a shooting star behind it. Reads as sly, mischievous magic rather than sincere wonder — use it for a knowing wink, not an earnest wish.

(ノ≧∀≦)ノ ‥…━━━★

Arms thrown up with a long trailing star. Big, excited magic energy, closer to a celebratory spell than a quiet one.

🔮✨🪄

Crystal ball, sparkle, and wand stacked together. A compact way to signal fortune-telling or general magical vibes without any text face at all.

🧙‍♂️💀🔥

A wizard emoji next to a skull and fire. Reads as dark or chaotic magic rather than sweet fantasy, useful for horror or villain-coded jokes.

🪄

Just the wand emoji on its own. The smallest possible way to say 'magic happened here' without committing to a whole face.

🧙‍♀️⚡️🧿

A witch, a lightning bolt, and an evil eye charm. Leans toward protective or defensive magic rather than a spell being cast outward.

🔮

The crystal ball alone. Shorthand for prediction, mystery, or 'let's see what happens,' without any extra decoration.

🪬

The hamsa-style charm emoji. Used for protection magic and warding off bad luck, closer to an amulet than a spell.

ᐠ( ᐛ )ᐟ

A simple cat-like face with paw hands, ᐠ( ᐛ )ᐟ. Not overtly magical on its own, but it gets used as a familiar or spirit-animal stand-in in fantasy roleplay threads.

o( ˶^▾^˶ )o

A round, pleased face, o( ˶^▾^˶ )o. Works as the satisfied look after a spell lands correctly, when you want relief rather than triumph.

૮꒰ ˶• ༝ •˶꒱ა ♡

A soft cat-shaped face wrapped in a heart, ૮꒰ ˶• ༝ •˶꒱ა ♡. Good for a 'magic feels cozy today' message rather than anything dramatic.

∧_∧   (。・ω・。)つ━☆・*。 ⊂/  /  ・゜  しーJ    °。+ * 。        .・゜       ゜。゚゚・。・゚゚。       ゚。   。゚  ゚・。・゚

A drawn creature summoning a star burst, rendered across four lines. This is ASCII-style magic art — it takes more space than a normal face, so save it for a post or caption rather than a quick reply.

/0 \_/0\ (づ๑•ᴗ•๑)づ❀⋆˚✿˖° ( | ) |___0____|

A multi-line drawing of a small creature with a flower-shaped spell effect. Another full ASCII piece; it copies as one block including its line breaks.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Magic Kaomoji — background

Kaomoji are read upright, emoticons sideways

Western emoticons such as :-) developed on early ASCII systems where tilting your head was the cheapest way to see a face. Japanese users had access to a far larger character set through JIS encodings, so their faces never needed rotating. That single difference explains why kaomoji have eyes, cheeks, and arms while emoticons mostly have a mouth.

The brackets are borrowed from other alphabets

Characters that look purpose-built for expressive faces are usually loaned. Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, Coptic marks, and other scripts supply shapes that read as arms, ears, or gestures. Nobody designed them for kaomoji; the community simply found shapes that fit.

Copying is the whole distribution mechanism

Kaomoji spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A face becomes standard purely because enough people copied it, which is why several near-identical star-toss and wand gestures circulate at once.

The star-toss gesture predates most magic emoji

The ⊃━☆ arm-and-star combination shows up across many unrelated Japanese kaomoji lists long before 🪄 and 🔮 became widely supported emoji, and it still gets used today because it reads clearly even on older devices.

Fortune-telling symbols split into two visual families

This collection shows a clear split between sparkly, star-heavy faces meant to look like a spell landing, and darker, fog-or-skull heavy clusters meant to look ominous. Both get called 'magic kaomoji' even though they signal opposite moods.

What is magic kaomoji?

Magic kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces and symbol combinations that suggest spellcasting, wizardry, fortune-telling, or mystical energy. Some are full text faces with arms and a wand gesture, others are compact emoji clusters like a crystal ball and sparkles.

How do I copy magic kaomoji?

Tap any face on this page and it copies to your clipboard as plain text. Paste it into a chat, caption, bio, or username the same way you would paste any other word.

What is the best kaomoji for casting a spell?

ଘ(∩^o^)⊃━☆゜ is the clearest 'casting a spell' gesture on this page, a figure flinging a star with both arms. (ノ≧∀≦)ノ ‥…━━━★ works too if you want bigger, more excited energy.

Are there dark or evil magic kaomoji?

Yes. Faces and emoji clusters built around skulls, chains, fog, and evil eyes lean dark rather than sweet, such as 🧙‍♂️💀🔥. Use those for horror or villain-themed posts instead of cute fantasy captions.

Is there a simple crystal ball symbol I can use?

🔮 is just the crystal ball emoji on its own, useful when you want a fortune-telling or mystery cue without a full text face.

Can I use magic kaomoji in Discord and Roblox names?

Short entries like the wand emoji alone or compact clusters copy cleanly into most name fields. Longer decorated faces with rare characters may get cut off by character limits, so test the specific field first.

Why do some magic kaomoji look like fog or a question mark?

Several entries here lean into mystery rather than spellcasting directly, combining fog, a locked symbol, or a question mark to suggest something hidden or unknown rather than an active spell.

What does the wand emoji alone mean in a message?

🪄 on its own is shorthand for 'and then magic happened,' often dropped right before or after describing a result, without needing a full sentence.

Are any of these kaomoji multi-line ASCII art?

Yes, a small number are full ASCII drawings spanning multiple lines, like a creature summoning a star burst. These copy as one block including their line breaks, so they work best in captions or posts rather than tight reply fields.