Special characters are at the root of most problems when users want to convert VCF to CSV. CSV files are very sensitive to encoding, and emojis may interrupt the file structure. Checking the VCF file for UTF-8 encoding is certainly helpful before the export is done. If it happens to be an old vCard format, like 2.1, the encoding could be unstable. Mostly the problems get solved if a tool that exports by default in UTF-8 is used. The WholeClear vCard to CSV Converter is compatible with 2.1, 3.0, and 4.0 formats; therefore, the emojis are kept. Also, it is compatible with all Windows versions; thus, the process becomes more comfortable. Users may firstly use the free demo to be sure of the result before the complete file conversion.