The Sunday Telegraph

Japanese sign up for DNA matchmakin­g

- By Danielle Demetriou in Tokyo

THE scene resembles a typical blind speed-dating event: 13 women and 13 men, seated on either side of a bamboo screen in a Tokyo restaurant.

But the doctor hovering on the fringes and the scientific documents held in the participan­t’s hands, however, offer a hint that this is no ordinary dating event: for everyone attending has undergone a DNA test in a bid to find their best romantic match.

Forget hobbies, profession­s, ages or nose sizes: one critical new criteria for finding the perfect partner was recently added to Japan’s fast-paced dating world, with the launch of a new service that promises to find love based on genetic compatibil­ity.

The dating company Nozze is working with scientists at a Tokyo laboratory in order to decode the science of attraction and find the perfect match for its clients.

The company staged its first “DNA Party” at a restaurant in Ginza earlier this month – attended by 26 guests and resulting in four new couples – with more events planned, including a special DNA Cruise in the autumn.

Japan is grappling with something of an epidemic of singles who are unable to find a partner, an issue intrinsica­lly linked to the nation’s famously low marriage and birth rates and doing little to help balance the rapidly ageing demographi­c of Japanese society.

Earlier this week, new government figures revealed that almost half of Japanese singles who wished to marry were unable to find a suitable partner, with more than 60 per cent admitting they were not doing anything to change the situation.

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