‘Housewife' sex trend sparks craze among lonely men
The sex dolls have become creepily realistic - and China's robot factories are at the centre of the revolution.
WMDoll, one of China's leading sex doll makers, is expecting a 30 per cent leap in sales this year, as men unable to find partners refuse to stay celibate.
Part of the uptick in interest comes from the enhanced 'user experience' - which now makes use of the latest AI tech.
Founder and CEO Liu Jiangxia told South China Morning Post: 'It makes the dolls more responsive and interactive, which offers users a better experience.'
WMDoll, based in based in Zhongshan, a city in southern Guangdong province, implants its dolls with its cutting edge 'MetaBox' brains.
These boast an AI element which is connected to the cloud.
The dolls fire off signals to Large Language Models (LLMs), like ChatGPT, which process the incoming data.
Instructions bounce back to the dolls, telling them how to move and interact.
The next-gen dolls are built from synthetic flesh stretched over a metal skeleton, weighing roughly half the weight of real humans.
The skin is formed from silicone or a similar material to create a feel as realistic as possible.
Traditional sex dolls are limited to simple, mechanical responses.
WMDoll thinks their dolls' ability to be more expressive gives them the edge.
The company says it can make dolls with roughly a whopping eight different 'personalities' to choose from, which are able to continue a conversation that could have started a few days earlier.
WMDoll also gives its dolls an AI tool which works in pandering to its partner's ego, with the ability to ask questions about their so-called 'relationship' as well as how they're feeling.
Founder Jiangxia said: 'In the past, these dolls' primary function was to satisfy users' sexual needs.
'But as their physical features such as head and joint movements and skin became more realistic, our customers started to seek emotional companionship in the dolls.'
The company began to use AI in its dolls back in 2016, with the tech constantly improving due to open source AI.
The dolls are usually made with thermoplastic, which is heated to 37C - a human's body temperature - to be as realistic as possible, with developers saying the creations have body sensors that also make them realistic.
A fellow doll manufacturer, Shenzhen Atall Intelligent Robot Technology, said previously that most of its doll buyers are 40 to 50-year-old men from Europe and the US.
Users can order custom-made AI dolls, priced at roughly £2,000 each (A$4,200), with soft and elastic skin made from rubbery plastic.
According to the company, US customers prefer dolls with darker skin and large breasts, buttocks and genitalia.
While customers in China opt for Asian features.
China has been previously estimated to make roughly over 80 per cent of the world's sex toys, with more than a million employed in the country's booming $6.6 billion (A$9.9b) industry.
Chinese feminist Xiao Meili has said she believes that some men will always have outdated expectations of women - and 'sex housewife robots' could help with this.
She said: 'A lot of men want the same for women: sex, housework, childbirth and filial piety. They don't think of women as individuals.
'If every nerd buys a sex doll for himself, […] that would free a lot of women from these kind of men.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
8 hours ago
- News.com.au
Elon Musk says OpenAI will ‘eat Microsoft alive' as GPT-5 launches to consumers
The AI arms race might be one of the most consequential things we witness this decade. But while the boffins behind the scenes scramble to create faster technology, the CEOs are on social media slinging mud at each other. Elon Musk is back swinging at tech behemoth Microsoft, warning that the company worth $3.8 trillion (A$5.9T) is about to be 'eaten alive' by its prized partner. The tech world is in a knife fight over who will control the most powerful AI, with alliances forming quickly in an effort to become the first enterprise to achieve AGI. In 2023, Microsoft sunk $13.5 billion into OpenAI, a move that has now seen ChatGPT weave into Word, Excel, GitHub, and several more of its flagship products. Musk, who famously walked away from OpenAI's board in 2018 accusing it of racketeering, has now warned Microsoft it may have signed its own redundancy papers by merging its products with the artificial intelligence behemoth. As a software giant, Microsoft led the way for decades as personal computers became the norm throughout the 1990s and beyond. But now the latest revolution centres around an entirely different side of computing. The AI boom has seen OpenAI launch itself into the stratosphere. The company has gone from a fringe start-up to one of the most influential businesses on the planet in ten short years, with major companies like Meta attempting to poach its developers in record nine-figure deals. Despite his chequered history with the company, Musk believes the utility offered by AI will eventually make Microsoft's core products irrelevant. 'OpenAI is going to eat Microsoft alive,' Musk posted under the announcement. The latest jab came just hours after OpenAI launched GPT-5, its much-hyped new model. Microsoft boss Satya Nadella celebrated its rollout across the company's products. And while Musk tried to crash the party, Nadella didn't flinch. 'People have been trying for 50 years, and that's the fun of it! … Excited for Grok 4 on Azure and looking forward to Grok 5!' OpenAI chief Sam Altman was equally dismissive. 'I don't think about him that much. I thought he was just, like, tweeting all day … about how much OpenAI sucks,' he said. In the lead-up, Altman promised GPT-5 would be 'smarter than GPT-4,' which he once admitted 'kind of sucks.' He also said the new model scares him, claiming it's advancing faster than the oversight needed to control it.

ABC News
12 hours ago
- ABC News
Chinese tech financier Bao Fan released after probe, says former colleague
Chinese tech financier and banker Bao Fan has been released by Chinese authorities after vanishing from public view more than two years ago while "cooperating" with an investigation, a former colleague told AFP. Mr Bao was a key player in the emergence of some of China's biggest tech giants and was involved in high-profile deals, including the mergers of ride-hailing firms Didi and its top rival Kuaidi Dache, food delivery giants Meituan and Dianping, and travel platforms Ctrip and Qunar. He went missing in February 2023 with little explanation and was one of several high-profile disappearances in China amid a sweeping anti-corruption campaign spearheaded by President Xi Jinping. His disappearance rattled professionals in the financial industry as Beijing pressed its campaign to rein in the "lavish lifestyle" of the "financial elite". In February 2024, Mr Bao's investment bank, China Renaissance, said he had stepped down as head. His former colleague, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said he remained in contact with the boutique bank and could confirm Mr Bao had been released, as first reported by financial media outlet Caixin. Mr Bao, who previously worked at Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley, was known for his close ties with the country's top tech bosses and was seen as a celebrity in venture capital circles. His release comes as China seeks to boost confidence in the private sector, which has been reeling from weak domestic consumption and a prolonged debt crisis in the property sector, against a broader backdrop of heightened trade tensions with the United States. "This is certainly a positive signal, as Bao was the most high-profile financier detained in recent years," said Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director of Gavekal Dragonomics. "Still, it won't change the fact that the anti-corruption campaign continues to churn through the financial sector, and the common prosperity campaign has led to sweeping pay caps and even clawbacks," said Mr Beddor. Mr Bao's disappearance — and China Renaissance's subsequent announcement that he was "cooperating in an investigation being carried out by certain authorities" — sent shock waves throughout the financial services industry. Trade in China Renaissance shares was suspended in April 2023 after the bank delayed publication of its audited annual results, after Mr Bao was detained. Sources have previously told Reuters that he was taken away to assist in an investigation into a former colleague. Chinese authorities never formally announced the scope of the investigation. Mr Bao is one of many influential figures in business, entertainment, and sporting sectors who have disappeared with minimal explanation. In 2020, Alibaba's founder Jack Ma disappeared for three months after giving a controversial speech before reappearing at a charity event, and his company was fined $US2.8 billion Business tycoon Ren Zhiqiang, who criticised Chinese President Xi Jinping's response to COVID-19, was also jailed for 18 years. In recent months, top military officials and high-ranking ministers have also been purged from President Xi's cabinet, amid factional politics. ABC/AFP/Reuters

ABC News
20 hours ago
- ABC News
Zero Day Attack TV series envisions fallout of imagined Chinese invasion
A newly-elected president makes an extreme sacrifice under great political and military pressure. A local fisherman, struggling after a typhoon destroys his livelihood, acts for the enemy. A couple deliberate over whether to finalise their divorce as conflict looms — and if they should flee to China. All these scenarios are explored in a new TV series in Taiwan, which dramatises the days leading up to an imagined invasion by Beijing. "You are able to capture little snippets of humanity in this potential moment of threat," Janet Hsieh, who plays President-elect Wang Ming-Fang in the anthology's first episode, said. Inspired by the likes of Black Mirror, the series — called Zero Day Attack — consists of 10 episodes, each directed by a different person. The premise of each chapter strikes close enough to Taiwan's current reality to unsettle viewers who have been living with the threat of Beijing simmering closer and closer to the surface for years. The Chinese Communist Party claims Taiwan is part of China, despite the fact the party has never ruled the island, which is governed by a democratically elected president and legislature. Beijing has derided the series, with Defense Ministry spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang accusing the ruling Democratic Progressive Party of "peddling anxieties and attempting to provoke war". "The film is plunging Taiwan into the flames of war," he said. What it has done is prompt discussions about everything from the political motivations behind the series through to what citizens would do if a war were really to break out. "In Taiwan, it's quite rare for productions to confront this kind of subject matter so directly — in fact, there's often an unspoken agreement to avoid it," actor Kaiser Chuang, who plays a central figure in the series' ninth episode, said. "We're not necessarily here to provide the answers — film and art rarely do — instead, we want to prompt people to think. "I see this series as a valuable opportunity to tear away the veil of 'don't talk about politics'. Funded by the Taiwanese government's culture ministry as well as a controversial and hawkish local billionaire Robert Tsao, the series is lucky to have been made. More than half of the crew asked to be anonymous in the credits for fear of reprisals and impacts on their career while some staff, including a director, pulled out of the production, showrunner Cheng Hsin Mei told Reuters. "Participating in such a production carries the risk of being blacklisted, so some crew members took part under pseudonyms," Taiwanese film critic Tang-Mo Tan told the ABC. "Many said the drama is seemingly designed to slowly stoke public fear, influence the [next] recall vote … and openly support [President] Lai Ching-te's 2028 re-election bid," Chinese state run-TV network CGTN reported. As a Taiwanese-American, Janet Hsieh is lucky she doesn't feel any such pressure on her career. Well known locally as the host of travel show Fun Taiwan, this turn to a high stakes political thriller is a major new challenge for Hsieh. Her character is a complex one, a young, newly-elected president, who comes to realise that the party — including her father — expects her to be a puppet. In one jarring scene, the president-elect's father scolds her about her manners while addressing the party's chairman. "She has pressures and stress coming from all over the place," Hsieh said. "Whether it's internal, within her party, within the government, within her family, with her father, it's coming at her from every single angle, and she has to kind of navigate this in a political and in a personal way." The series delves into the myriad of ways China could — and in some cases already does — squeeze Taiwan, well beyond military action. Episodes explore the connections many organised crime gangs have back to China and how temples are vulnerable to infiltration. "My character is someone who becomes infiltrated, he originally works in aquaculture in a rural area, essentially a fisherman, but after a devastating typhoon disrupts his livelihood, he becomes involved with people connected to infiltration activities," Chuang tells the ABC. "Infiltration, by its nature, works subtly — it gradually alters your values, your judgement, even your sense of national identity and awareness of crisis, until you grow numb to it." Hsieh describes Zero Day Attack as a series that — in a first for Taiwan — is tackling the elephant in the room. So far it has secured release in Taiwan, Japan and Indonesia, and its distributors are working to get it into more international markets, including Australia. "[This threat is] just always there, but yet, no drama has ever dramatised it before," Hsieh said. "I really hope that this series isn't about polarising. The message isn't about choosing one side or the other or even pushing a certain value or thought on anybody. "It is bringing out a subject that is on the forefront of everybody's minds, presenting it in a way that is saying: 'Look, here it is. What do you think about it? Let's talk about it.'" Last year a 17-minute trailer was released and created a lot of hype, and in central Taipei at least, it seems a lot of people are interested in watching the series. "The atmosphere in the trailer was quite intense," local Wang Shengfu said. "It really gave me the sense that a cross-strait conflict might actually happen. "Taiwan's political divide is quite clear-cut, works like this could spark discussion but I also think there's a chance that politicians might use the show to promote their own political agendas." That has already happened. Mr Tsao has also funded other resilience efforts, including the Kuma Academy, where many Taiwanese citizens go for "civil defence" classes. "This film isn't meant to scare people, we simply hope it helps everyone be a little more prepared for situations that could potentially happen," Mr Tsao told reporters at the premiere of the show's first episode at a cinema in Taipei's trendy Xinyi district. "In fact, many foreign journalists visiting Taiwan find it puzzling, they see how nervous the international community is for us, but wonder why the Taiwanese themselves don't seem worried at all. "This film also aims to strengthen people's psychological resilience — meaning, when something happens, we don't panic and we know what to do." Chinese state media reporting on Zero Day Attack has accused it of being "built on [President Lai Ching-te's] fear and distortion". President Lai is loathed by Beijing, which calls him a "dangerous separatist". "Many said the drama is seemingly designed to slowly stoke public fear, influence the [next] recall vote … and openly support [President] Lai Ching-te's 2028 re-election bid," state run-TV network CGTN reported. Very recently Mr Tsao backed a mass recall motion, seeking to unseat more than 30 legislators from the main opposition party the Kuomintang. This came after months of political gridlock and division in the parliament, where the KMT, in alliance with a minor party, has the majority. In the days leading up to the July 26 vote, the KMT released a parody of Zero Day Attack. While seven lawmakers are yet to be voted on, the majority of the ballots took place late last month, and not a single person was successfully recalled. Taipei resident Chen Hongzhu predicts this political polarisation will impact the viewership of Zero Day Attack. "Some of my friends with different political views tend to look into whether the creators have any political affiliations before deciding whether they're willing to trust or to watch," she says.