
Follow Mashable SEA on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. EDT A Snap representative confirmed that the health-based stickers are indeed new and not just recently surfaced. Way to do your public health duty, little animated friends! Make a Bitmoji Scene in Google Slides (Bitmoji Classroom) EZ EdTech 77.8K subscribers 1.2M views 2 years ago All things Bitmoji In this tutorial, you will learn how to quickly and easily make.


Along with social distancing, experts say staying home if we're sick, washing our hands, and avoiding touching our faces is an effective way to slow the spread of coronavirus. Since there is a vast shortage of coronavirus tests, it mirrors the advice of many public health officials. The advice the Bitmojis give is sound, and efforts to spread the message can only be positive. The bubbly text that communicates our simplistic if best defense against a rapidly spreading virus also comes with adorably animated soap dispensers and cartoon germs.

Mashable has reached out to Snap (which owns Bitmoji) for more information, and will update this when we hear back. It's unclear whether the stickers are new, or if they've always been there, and are just now surfacing because of heightened fears of covid-19 infection.
