He’s 6ft tall with a rippling six-pack, brooding dark looks and speaks only when spoken to.

To many women, he may sound like the ideal man. But sadly for them, ‘Henry’ is, in fact, just a robot.

Costing between £8,000 and £11,000 – depending on optional extras – he is the world’s first ‘companion’ robot aimed at females.

He will welcome his owner home and, in a British accent, talk about their favourite TV show or movie, tell jokes and woo them with romantic phrases and even the words to their favourite love poem or song.

Sex doll makers are set to launch a 6ft tall model made for women called 'Henry' (pictured). He is the world's first 'companion' robot aimed at women

Henry’s silicone body is anatomically correct in every way, and is topped by a robotic head that users interact with through an app on their iPad or tablet. At around six stone, he’s a bit of a lightweight and is yet to be endowed with robotic movement in his body.

Every part of him can be built to order – including the size and shape of his manhood – though the developers have not yet found a way of making that part fully robotic.

Matt McMullen, a married father-of-five from San Diego, California, and CEO of Henry’s creators Realbotix, unveiled the ‘manbot’ last week saying it would offer ‘companionship’ to lonely women all over the world.

McMullen, 48, explained: ‘Women have the same issues of loneliness as men. People call them sex dolls but mostly it’s about companionship. In this world of computers people are missing out on human interaction.’

Every part of him can be built to order – including the size and shape of his manhood – though the developers have not yet found a way of making that part fully robotic

Realbotix already produces the controversial ‘Harmony’, a female robot with dozens of interchangeable parts, allowing owners to alter everything from eye colour to hair and even bottom shape.

The market for ‘sexbots’ is currently 95 per cent male-dominated and some have criticised female versions as ‘objectifying’ women. One manufacturer – shockingly – offers a robot with a ‘Frigid Farrah’ setting which tells users ‘No, No!’ before succumbing to a sexual advance.

But Harvard University mathematics expert Dr Cathy O’Neil said Henry might be good for women – and men. She said: ‘What’s not to love about a dashing manbot? It’s possible they will out-perform men in certain areas, not just in the bedroom. Perhaps that will encourage men to up their game and find out what women really want. And if they can teach him to give a massage and take out the rubbish, all the better.’