Browse ready-made ASCII art and kaomoji by category, or turn your own text into a banner. Copy any piece with one tap and paste it into Discord.
Faces, animals, the shrug, the table flip, and more are one click away. For text banners, the copy button wraps the art in a code block so the spacing stays lined up.
Pick a category of ready-made art, or switch to text banner mode to turn your own words into a banner.
Tap copy on the art or banner you want.
Drop it into a message. Banners come wrapped in a code block so the spacing holds.
ASCII art turns a word into a picture built from characters. Each letter is drawn large out of smaller symbols, so a short name becomes a banner. It is a fun way to mark the top of a message, an announcement, or a profile.
The block fonts here use solid characters that join into clean letters, while the line fonts use slashes and bars for a lighter look. Try a couple and pick what fits the message.
ASCII art only lines up in a font where every character is the same width. Discord uses that kind of font inside a code block, so the art holds its shape there. In a normal message the spacing collapses and the picture falls apart.
The copy button wraps the art in triple backticks for you, so when you paste and send, it appears as a tidy block. Paste it as plain text and it will look broken, so always use the copy button.
Shorter text gives you more room before the art gets too wide. The Shadow and Block fonts are bold and easy to read, while Standard, Slant, and Doom are lighter and narrower. If your art is spilling sideways, switch to a smaller font or shorten the text.
Because it is multi line, ASCII art belongs in messages, not in a username, a channel name, or a server name, which are all single line. For a styled name, the font generator is the right tool. Save the ASCII for a header inside a message where the code block can do its job.
It works on the phone app, with one caveat: wide art scrolls sideways on a small screen, so a big banner that looks great on desktop can be awkward on mobile. Keep the text to a word or two and most phones will show it without scrolling.
Discord needs a code block to keep the spacing. Use the copy button, which wraps the art in backticks for you.
Short is best. A single name or word stays narrow enough to read on mobile.
The fonts cover letters, numbers, and common symbols. Anything unsupported is skipped.
ASCII art is multi-line, so it fits messages, not names. For names, try the font generator.
Yes, though wide art can scroll sideways. Keep the text short for phones.