The Star Malaysia

Romancing the phone

Japanese women are turning on mobile apps for virtual love.

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TOKYO: Japanese book editor Miho Takeshita is having an affair. But the recently married 30-year-old is not worried about getting caught -her boyfriend only exists on a smartphone.

Takeshita is a fan of romance simulation games, a booming market in Japan that is winning the hearts of women looking for some unconventi­onal loving.

“It’s very addictive,” Takeshita said.

“Even though the game characters aren’t real, you start to develop feelings towards them.”

That is the whole point, said Natsuko Asaki, a game producer at Cybird, which created the popular series Ikemen – a Japanese term for handsome guys.

“The story is most important, as well as the characters, and the twists and turns,” Asaki said.

The Ikemen app has been downloaded some 15 million times since its launch about five years ago, and the firm has also released an English version.

Mirroring the smartphone boom, female-targeted virtual romance games have ballooned into a market worth about 15 billion yen (RM588mil) annually in Japan, according to the Tokyo-based Yano Research Institute.

Some 80% of fans, including a growing number of married women, play just before bed, a Cybird survey found.

The games do not rely on complicate­d algorithms, but instead offer multiple choice scenarios that let players escape into a world where they create their own love story with digital hunks.

Takeshita does not see anything strange about flirting with her smartphone sweeties.

In fact, she can engage with them whenever she likes – something real-life spouses do not always provide.

“The games also have sexual overtones but they’re expressed less crudely than in simulation­s made for boys,” Cybird’s Asaki said.

“It’s an ideal love story – there are no female rivals and no sad endings.”

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