Daniel Jones gets a new toy on Sunday. Golden Tate doesn’t have to answer questions about any fertility doctor anymore. He will begin to answer questions about how much Jones and the Giants miss Odell Beckham Jr. when he makes his Giants debut following an agonizing four-game suspension.

The firestorm over the blockbuster Beckham trade to the Browns was still raging when general manager Dave Gettleman signed Tate a little over 24 hours later to a four-year, $37.5 million deal.

They are quarterback-friendly in different ways. Beckham can terrorize a defense at any given moment. Tate can kill you softly as a chain-mover with YAC (yards after catch) prowess.

“With me being an older guy in this league, and kind of knowing my worth and knowing what I bring to a team, there wasn’t really any pressure,” Tate told The Post. “Obviously Odell is a phenomenal athlete, incredible talent, and we’re very lucky to be able to watch him.

“But I didn’t feel pressure kind of filling anyone’s shoes. I just was gonna come in, bring the spark and do what I’ve been doing when I was in Seattle and Detroit and the brief time I was in Philly.”

His Twitter handle is @ShowtimeTate.

“Caught a lot of grief for it my first few years ’cause I wasn’t making too many plays on the field,” Tate said, “but then after that, it kind of grew and it kind of became my name.”

When Eagles quarterback Nick Foles needed someone to get open on fourth-and-goal with less than a minute left in January’s wild-card playoff game against the Bears, Tate got open and caught the winning 2-yard touchdown pass.

“He’s not the tallest, he’s not the fastest, but he makes plays,” safety Antoine Bethea said.

Sterling Shepard insists he and Tate are two different receivers, while Tate acknowledges similarities. But both are dangerous in the slot, both can function on the outside, and both add unpredictability to coach Pat Shurmur’s offense.

“I can kind of see like Sterling similar to how Golden was Year 4, Year 5, you know what I’m saying?” Bethea said.

Tate, 31, arrives at a time when Saquon Barkley remains on the sideline, at a time when the Kirk Cousins-Stefon Diggs Vikings are enduring enough turmoil to make you wonder whether they could be ripe for the picking, especially if Jones can weather this Purple People Eater storm and force Cousins to play catch-up.

“He’s not the biggest, he might not be the fastest, but he’s really shifty, he’s really detailed with his routes, he can stop on a dime, he can cut in, cut out, and his hands are really consistent,” Evan Engram said, “and he’s a big playmaker.”

Nickelback Grant Haley has defended both in the slot.

“I think Shep’s more shifty off the line, he’s gonna give you a lot more different releases,” Haley said, “and Tate’s smart and crafty. He knows what the defender’s trying to do to him. He has strong hands, he can position his body to make great catches as well.”

Not one-handed catches like Beckham. The Giants simply expect two-handed catches from Tate.

“He’s a guy that you can throw the ball to and he can get maybe like a 3-yard catch and make that into like a 20-yard gain,” Haley said.

Jones’ development will ultimately define the extent to which the Giants will miss Beckham. In the meantime, Tate will serve as more of a golden Band-Aid.

“New chapter in my life, new opportunity,” Tate said. “This being my 10th year, I’ve kind of learned how to keep my emotions within a certain range.

“I’m trying to keep ’em right where they need to be right now … but it’s harder than it usually is.”

Showtime.