A total of 42 percent of red envelopes went to men and 58 percent to women.Įach WeChat user walked an average of 6,932 steps a day, and on weekends, some 12 million users walked less than 100 steps. My wife recently got into that sticker/emoji-collecting-thing on WeChat (god knows why) and she would like to use the WeChat stickers on other messengers like Whatsapp (or have access to the image files in general). Similar to Wikipedia, we rely on the community to share, build and define the Emoji that have so long remained shrouded in mystery.
On mobile payments, men paid for 59 percent of meal bills, and women for 57 percent of purchases in shops. The Emoji Dictionary is the first crowdsourced Emoji resource on the web.
#Wechat emoji looking update
With the demand for emoticons ever-increasing, WeChat’s latest update now lets users collect and save up to 999 emoticons, instead of the previous 300. Emoticons have long been a huge fad among WeChat users when chatting, especially since some emojis can be customized. Men shared work and games on WeChat Moments and women food and emotions. WeChat Update 5: More Collectable Emoticons. Young people focused on cartoons and animations while middle-aged people preferred content on pregnancy, childbirth and parenting. WeChat had 1.151 billion active users every month, and the peak time for using the super app, with multiple functions including mobile payments and food delivery services, was before lunch and after daily work, according to the report on Thursday. WeChat's 2018 report showed that people in different age groups had their preferences for emojis, with "facepalm" going to users born in 2000s, "face with tears of joy" to post-90s users, "grin" to post-80s users, and "chuckle" to post-70s users. In contrast, the second most popular emoji in 2018, "face with tears of joy", was not so popular last year, and the "rose" emoji has become a favorite to take the fifth position. The top five most popular emojis used by WeChat users in 2019 were facepalm, grin, chuckle, thumb-up and rose, according to a report released Thursday by Tencent's WeChat, China's most popular messaging app. "Facepalm" is said to be based on Hong Kong top star Stephen Chow's classic role in the movie.