Software Alternatives & Reviews

Emojicom.io

Capture your visitors emotions subtitle

Pricing:
Platforms:
  • Browser
  • Wordpress
  • Shopify
  • Weebly
  • Wix
  • Squarespace

Top 7 Open-Source Alternatives to Emojicom.io

Usersnap ClearFlask Sensa Emoji Emoji OpenMoji 12.0 JoyPixels Boolean

Summary

The top open-source alternatives to Emojicom.io are Usersnap, ClearFlask, and Sensa Emoji. One of the criteria for ordering this list is the number of mentions that products have on reliable external sources. You can suggest additional sources through the form here.
  1. Usersnap is a customer feedback software for SaaS companies that need to constantly improve and grow their products.
    Pricing:
    • Open Source
    • Paid
    • Free Trial
    • $69.0 / Monthly (10 team members, 5 feedback projects)

    #Visual Bug Reports #Bug Reporting #User Feedback 4 social mentions

  2. Open-source Product Feedback Tool with a Public Roadmap and Announcements.
    Pricing:
    • Open Source
    • Freemium
    • Free Trial
    • $10.0 / Monthly

    #User Feedback Management #Customer Feedback #User Feedback 2 social mentions

  3. Free, vector, and open-source emoji set
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Design Tools #Marketing #Developer Tools

  4. 4
    A collection of fun 3D emojis
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Design Tools #Productivity #Emojis

  5. Open source Unicode-compliant Emojis for everyone
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Emojis #Design Tools #Social & Communications 7 social mentions

  6. Freemium set of 3,057 native emoji icons ✨
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Personalization #Emoji Finder #Emojis

  7. Send single question yes/no surveys
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Surveys #Slack #Web App

Suggest an alternative
If you think we've missed something, please suggest an alternative to Emojicom.io.
Please use the Feedback button if you think any of the listed products shouldn't be regarded as open-source.

Generic Emojicom.io discussion

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  1. User avatar
    Letterly
    · 5 months ago
    · Reply

    Interesting cpmmunication approach: emotions, not usual feedbacks :)