Furious text faces for chats, memes, and captions

Rage Kaomoji

Copy rage kaomoji and furious Japanese text faces for chats, memes, table-flip reactions, and captions.

Rage Kaomoji copy and paste

198 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 200 rage kaomoji text faces.

Rage Kaomoji ASCII art

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

2 pieces
ascii art rage face2×10

Discord messages

Drop a fuming face into a rant channel or a losing-game thread when text alone is not loud enough.

Meme captions

Table-flip and vein-pop faces pair naturally with screenshots of bad takes, bugs, or referee decisions.

Group chat reactions

A short glare face reacts to a bad joke or a broken promise faster than typing out the complaint.

Stream and chat overlays

Big, symmetrical rage faces read clearly even when compressed into a small chat box on stream.

How to use rage kaomoji

Venting in a group chat

  • Open with a fuming face like (ꐦ¬_¬) to signal frustration before typing the complaint
  • Escalate with ヽ༼ ಠ益ಠ ༽ノ when a plain glare is not strong enough
  • Close a rant with the table flip (╯'□')╯︵ ┻━┻ for a comedic release valve

Meme captions and reaction images

  • Pair a screenshot of a bad take with (ᗒᗣᗕ)՞ for a dramatic glare
  • Use 凸(`⌒´メ)凸 when the caption implies someone is about to throw hands
  • Keep the face short so it does not compete with the image for attention

Quiet, dry irritation

  • A flat stare like (◣_◢) reads as unimpressed rather than furious
  • (¬_¬) is safe punctuation-only shorthand for mild annoyance
  • Avoid the louder shouting faces here; understatement lands better

Usernames and short bios

  • Pick faces with no spaces so trimming does not break them
  • 눈_눈 and ಠ_ಠ are short enough to survive tight limits
  • Test on mobile first; heavily decorated faces can fall back to boxes

Rage Kaomoji message templates

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

Rage Kaomoji meanings

( 。 •`ᴖ´• 。)

A restrained scowl with pressed lips. Reads as quiet irritation rather than an outburst, good for sarcastic replies.

(ꐦ¬_¬)

A single furrowed-brow face with a vein mark. The classic minimal rage kaomoji, short enough for usernames and inline text.

(¬_¬)

The plain furrowed-brow face without decoration. The safest rage kaomoji to paste anywhere since it uses only common punctuation.

(◣_◢)

Two dark slashes for eyes, no mouth. Reads as blank, seething anger rather than an expressive outburst.

ಠ_ಠ

A bare pair of flat, disapproving eyes. No mouth or arms, so it works as a quiet aside rather than a dramatic reaction.

(╯'□')╯︵ ┻━┻

A launched table paired with a scowling face. The single most recognizable rage kaomoji online, used whenever something is too frustrating to continue.

ヽ༼ ಠ益ಠ ༽ノ

Raised arms around a glaring, wide-eyed face. The doubled brackets and fists signal a group of people about to riot, not a single quiet complaint.

ヽ(`⌒´メ)ノ

A running, leaning silhouette next to a snarling face. Suggests someone charging forward in anger rather than standing still and stewing.

凸(`⌒´メ)凸

Two fists with a snarling face between them. This reads as an active threat gesture, stronger than a simple frown.

←(ಠ_ಠ)→

A flat glare framed by arrows pointing inward. The arrows emphasize the stare, useful for calling out something specific.

(ᗒᗣᗕ)՞

A wobbling, unstable face with a tilted mouth. Suggests barely-controlled frustration about to boil over.

눈_눈

A minimalist glare using flat brackets for eyes and nothing else. Compact enough to survive tight character limits.

ノಠ_ಠノ

The same flat stare with running lines on either side, as if storming off mid-glare.

(¬▂¬)

Sharp, narrowed eyes with a bar for a brow. A quieter cousin of the vein-pop faces, better for cold anger than a loud outburst.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Rage 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 is why rage kaomoji can have raised fists, shouting mouths, and glaring eyes all at once.

The brackets are borrowed from other alphabets

Characters that look purpose-built for angry faces are usually loaned from elsewhere. ಠ is a Kannada letter, ლ is Georgian, and ৎ is Bengali. Nobody designed them for kaomoji; the community found shapes that read as glaring eyes and clawing arms.

The table flip has its own emoji equivalent

(╯°□°)╯︵┻━┻ became so iconic that it inspired dedicated emoji and sticker packs, but the original punctuation-built kaomoji still outperforms the emoji version because it can be typed anywhere, on any keyboard, without needing emoji support.

Table-flip has a matching unflip

The community also built the reverse gesture, ┬─┬ノ( º _ ºノ), for calmly putting the table back. It rarely trends on its own, but it shows the format was always meant to be read as a small comic strip, not just a single static face.

Rare characters are why some faces break

A kaomoji renders only if the reader's device ships a font covering every character in it. Older Android builds omit large parts of Unicode, so heavily decorated rage faces can collapse into empty boxes. Faces built from common punctuation, such as (¬_¬), have survived for years precisely because they demand nothing unusual.

What is rage kaomoji?

Rage kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces built from Unicode punctuation and symbols that express anger, fury, or frustration. They paste as plain text, so they keep their shape in any chat, caption, or bio.

How do I copy rage kaomoji?

Tap any face on this page and it copies to your clipboard instantly. Paste it into a message, meme caption, or username exactly like normal text.

What is the table-flip kaomoji?

(╯'□')╯︵ ┻━┻ is the classic table-flip rage face. The ┻━┻ represents a table being thrown, paired with a face mid-motion. It is one of the most recognized kaomoji online.

Which rage kaomoji works best in short messages?

Compact faces without extra brackets or arms, such as (¬_¬) or ಠ_ಠ, fit inline with a sentence and survive character limits better than the longer table-flip or fist-pumping variants.

Do rage kaomoji work on Discord, Instagram, and TikTok?

Yes, all the faces here are plain Unicode text, so they render anywhere text is accepted. A few of the more decorated faces use rare characters that can show as empty boxes on very old devices.

Why do some rage kaomoji show up as boxes or missing characters?

That happens when the reader's device lacks a font covering every character in the face. It is a rendering gap on their end, not a broken copy. Simple faces like (¬_¬) avoid the problem entirely.

What is the difference between angry kaomoji and rage kaomoji?

They overlap heavily. Angry kaomoji lean toward glares and mild irritation, while rage kaomoji push further into shouting, fist-shaking, and table-flipping faces meant for a full outburst.

Can I use rage kaomoji sarcastically?

Yes. A mild glare like ( 。 •`ᴖ´• 。) after a sentence often reads as dry sarcasm rather than genuine anger, since the punctuation is soft while the context implies frustration.

Are rage kaomoji rude to send in a group chat?

Context decides. A fuming face reacting to a shared joke usually reads as playful exaggeration, while sending one directly at a person's message can land as a real complaint. Read the room before sending.

How many rage kaomoji are on this page?

There are 200 faces here, grouped into classic scowls, fuming faces, disapproving glares, explosive vein-pop reactions, and table-flip combos.