But the skin tone modifier is notably missing for one particular hand-themed emoji: ?. It’s a mystery that has troubled Redditors for years. Determined to get Reddit the answer it deserves, I set out on a quest to find out why that is. “What makes the handshake emoji different to most other emojis is that it includes the hands of two people,” emoji historian and founder of Emojipedia, Jeremy Burge, told TNW. “If skin tone support were added to this emoji right now, it would mean both people have to share a skin tone, as the modifier would apply to the whole emoji including both hands.” “This has been the main reason that until now all emojis with two or more people didn’t support skin tones in Unicode’s RGI list,” he added. “Handshake requires new code points for each hand to support mixed skin tones, and this has been in the future planning since 2019.”

In fact, the handshake emoji is hardly the only case that falls into this category. “Other emojis that don’t support skin tones due to multi-person groupings include Wrestlers (?‍♀️, ?‍♂️), People with Bunny Ears (?‍♀️, ?‍♂️), and all the families (?‍?‍?, ?‍?‍?‍?, ?‍?),” Burge enlightened me. But that might soon change. “Last year Emoji 12.0 added support for people holding hands with different skin tones,” the emoji historian said. “Draft candidates for Emoji 13.1 Unicode also shortlist more two-person emojis, including mixed skin tone support for all variations of Kiss (?) and Couple with Heart (?).” The same goes for the handshake emoji. “At this stage skin tone support for the handshake emoji is drafted for Emoji 14.0  meaning it could be on phones in 2021-2022,” Burge explains. Indeed, variations of mixed tone handshake emoji are already in the wild — but only in a limited capacity. “Some platforms already support the shared skin tone for handshake, but others appear to be holding back from any skin tone support until each hand can support a different skin tone,” the Emojipedia founder noted. That said, there’s a family of emoji that likely won’t support mixed tones, and it’s, ironically, the families emoji. “Unicode has stated a preference to leave those as-is,” Burge told TNW. “Over 7,000 combinations would be required to support a different skin tone for each family member in each of the family emoji options, and this was deemed impractical and difficult to implement for most vendors.”

Why skin tone modifiers don t work for    explained by an emoji historian - 97