Of course, not all of the emoji names work as intended, and could hamper any efforts to find them in Power Shell, or when linking to a Word or Powerpoint file. But if you can get past that, it’s a lot of fun.

  1. From the taskbar, type File Explorer in the search box. If the search box isn’t there, or you had disabled it previously, you can open the Start menu and use that search field instead.
  2. Under best match, click File Explorer. 
  3. Select the folder you want to rename
  4. Click Rename.
  5. Press Windows Key and G at the same time to open the emoji panel.
  6. Select an emoji from the panel.
  7. Press Enter to save emoji as the folder name. Credit: Microsoft

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