Clash Royale Emotes & the 67 Emote
A gallery of the official Fan Kit emotes, an honest look at emote culture, and the real story behind the viral 67 Wizard emote and the 6-7 meme.
Official emote gallery
These are the official Clash Royale emote stills from Supercell's Fan Kit that Clashest bundles. Hover any tile to see it animate. You can drop these codes straight into the Clashest forum — type a code like :nope: and it renders as the emote.

:goblinlaugh:
:knightslide:
:hogflex:
:princessheart:
:snore:
:dance:
:floss:
:nope:About these emotes (the honest version)
The eight emotes above are the official still images published in Supercell's Clash Royale Fan Kit — that is the complete set of emote art we have the rights to show, and it is all we display. Clash Royale itself has many more emotes in-game (dozens of Wizards, seasonal, and event emotes, including the 6-7 Wizard discussed below), but we do not have or reproduce that art. In the real game each emote is a full animated Spine skeleton; the hover motion here is a tasteful CSS effect applied to the official still, not the literal in-game animation. We show only the officially published art — nothing ripped, nothing fabricated.
What emotes are in Clash Royale
Emotes are small animated reactions you send to your opponent during a battle. You build an emote deck from ones you own — earned in the Shop, from Pass Royale and event rewards, special offers, or the occasional free giveaway — and tap one mid-match to taunt, celebrate, or commiserate. Classics like the crying King, the laughing Goblin, and the flexing Hog Rider have become a shared language among players, capable of tilting an opponent as much as a good counter-push.
Emote wars & spamming
Repeatedly firing the same emote — the laugh, the "Thanks!", the crying King after a lucky elixir leak — is a long-running form of psychological warfare. It has no effect on the board, but rapid-fire "emote spam" is meant to rattle opponents, and it is exactly the behaviour the 6-7 trend leaned into.
Muting emotes
If the spam gets to you, you can mute it. Tap the opponent's emote bubble during a battle to silence that player's emotes for the rest of the match — the standard, built-in counter to emote wars, with no impact on gameplay.
The "67 emote" and the 6-7 meme, honestly
If you searched for the "67 emote," here is the straight answer: there is no official Clash Royale emote literally named "67." The name is community shorthand for a real, official emote — the 6-7 Wizard — plus the wider habit of spamming "6 7" in match chat.
The 6-7 ("six seven") meme itself started outside gaming. It comes from the drill track "Doot Doot (6 7)" by rapper Skrilla, released early 2025, in which he chants the numbers over a beat drop — the artist has said he never gave "6 7" a meaning. The phrase exploded through TikTok and Instagram Reels edits of 6-foot-7 NBA player LaMelo Ball and viral clips of kids (notably the "67 Kid") shouting it with a one-hand-up, one-hand-down gesture. It became so pervasive that Dictionary.com named "67" its 2025 Word of the Year, describing it as energy that spreads before anyone agrees what it means.
Clash Royale's tie-in came on October 27, 2025, when Supercell released a free limited-time 6-7 Wizard emote to celebrate hitting 6.7 million Instagram followers. It reskins the existing Disco Wizard emote — whose pose already matched the meme's one-hand-up, one-hand-down gesture — so the glowing effects spell out a "6" and a "7." Players claimed it through a promotional link, and it fuelled a wave of emote- and chat-spamming the numbers in matches. That officially published Wizard is what "67 emote Clash Royale" searches are really about.
We do not have the 6-7 Wizard's art in our Fan Kit set, so it is described here but not shown — the gallery above is limited to the official stills we actually have the rights to display. Browse the Clash Royale card list or head to the forum to use the emote codes above.
Emotes FAQ
What is the 67 emote in Clash Royale?
The "67 emote" refers to the free limited-time 6-7 Wizard emote Supercell released on October 27, 2025 to celebrate reaching 6.7 million Instagram followers. It reskins the Disco Wizard emote so his one-hand-up, one-hand-down pose spells out a glowing "6" and "7" — a nod to the viral 6-7 meme. There has never been an in-game emote literally named "67"; the name is community shorthand for that Wizard emote and for spamming the numbers in chat.
What does the 6-7 meme mean?
Nothing fixed — that's the joke. The 6-7 ("six seven") meme comes from Skrilla's drill track "Doot Doot (6 7)," spread through basketball edits of 6-foot-7 NBA player LaMelo Ball and viral clips of kids shouting it. Dictionary.com even named "67" its 2025 Word of the Year, calling it energy that spreads before anyone agrees what it means. Clash Royale players latched onto it by spamming emotes and "6 7" in match chat.
Can you mute emotes in Clash Royale?
Yes. If an opponent is spamming emotes, tap and hold (or tap) their emote bubble in a battle to mute that player's emotes for the rest of the match. This is the standard counter to emote wars — it silences the spam without affecting gameplay.
How do you get emotes in Clash Royale?
Emotes come from the Shop, event and Pass Royale rewards, special offers, and occasional free giveaways like the 6-7 Wizard promotion. You equip them in your emote deck, then tap one during a battle to send it to your opponent.