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tofu glyph
About this tag
The tofu glyph, commonly seen as a blank rectangle or question mark box, appears when a system or application lacks a font with the required Unicode character. On Windows 11, this issue has become more visible with the rollout of Emoji 16.0 in version 24H2, where new emoji like Face with Bags Under Eyes may render correctly in some apps but show the tofu glyph in others due to inconsistent font and rendering engine support. Discussions on WindowsForum.com highlight how the problem stems from font plumbing and rendering engines rather than just Unicode support, affecting user experience across different software. Understanding the tofu glyph helps users identify missing fonts and troubleshoot display issues in Windows.
Windows 11 has quietly gained support for Emoji 16.0 — but the rollout is partial, inconsistent, and leaves important UI surfaces and apps still showing “missing glyph” boxes instead of the new icons.
Background / Overview
Emoji 16.0 is a deliberately small Unicode/emoji update that introduced...
Windows 11’s 24H2 is now shipping support for Emoji 16.0 — but there’s a catch: the system emoji panel doesn’t yet expose the new icons, and rendering remains inconsistent across apps and web services. What looks like a late-but-welcome Unicode update has instead exposed a long-standing Windows...