Original "horse" kanji, with five strokes presumably representing five fingers doing a facepalm like what Air Groove is doing here
bro-kunEN said:
The last one also looks as if the top is a hand and the bottom is a blush.
Neither actually... There's a slang in the JP keiba community that jokingly points to a fifth horse leg... Let's just say that it's not out of random choice that Air Groove is used as a punchline.
TERRIBLEModified kanji for "horse" in the Umamusume universe with two strokes at the bottom representing their two legs.Actual kanji for "horse" in our world with four legs.Original "horse" kanji, with five strokes representing five legs, with the fifth being a joke/slang referring to a male horse's penis.