Google introduced the blobs, created by Japanese design studio
IC4DESIGN, as part of its
Android KitKatmobile operating system in 2013. The next year, Google expanded the blob style to include the
emojis that normally depict humans. As an example, instead of a
flamenco dancer in Apple emoji style and its derivates, Google's blob style showed a blob with a rose in its teeth. In 2016, Google redesigned the blobs into a
gumdrop shape. As Unicode, the group that establishes emoji standards, introduced skin tone and gender options to emojis, Google's emojis progressively appeared more as humans and less as yellow, amorphous blobs. Google retired the blobs in 2017 with the release of
Android Oreo in favor of circular emojis, designed by
Jennifer Daniel, similar in style to that of other platforms. Consistent cross-platform emoji interpretation was among the redesign's primary aims. The redesign, which had been in development for about a year, mimicked an Apple effort to include more detail in the emoji glyph and offer yellow skin tone as the default.[1]
Despite their deprecation, Google's
Gmail continued to use the blob emojis, as of 2022,[2] and Google reintroduced the blob emoji in
Gboard's Emoji Kitchen feature,[3] which lets users combine two emojis into one pictograph.[4] Blobs are also used to represent people in the Noto Emoji font.[5]
Reception
The blob emoji were a divisive feature between 2013 and 2017. Proponents praised their novel interpretation of emoji
ideograms while detractors criticized the miscommunication that results when emoji are interpreted differently across platforms.[1]
In 2018, Google released
sticker packs featuring blob emoji for
Gboard and Android Messages.[6]