Technology has contributed to making everything from taxi-cabs to bookstores to snail-mail all but outmoded. Joining innovations that include Uber, Amazon and email is a China-based mobile game called “Love and Producer.”

These iconic but artificial men (including a steely CEO, a lovable pop star, a brainy scientist and a super-powered policeman) have the potential to make real-world boyfriends obsolete and so last millennium, according to Wired.

“Love and Producer” offers high-tech beaus who are programmed to radiate ultra-desirable attributes that can be tough to find in human males. “The men in the game are more attractive than real boyfriends,” a smitten participant told Wired. “They’re very attractive. They’re generally into more feelings and emotions.”

The game centers on participants “producing” TV shows, but the real draws are the love interests that develop.

Female players instantly responded to the romantic components of this game that launched in December 2017. In its first two months, “Love and Producer” was downloaded more than 10 million times. Obsessed women have their enthusiasm stoked via ASMR-augmented videos that lull them to sleep and a special version that addresses “aunty visits” — the Chinese euphemism for menstruation. Voiceover artists create phone-calls and social media updates that keep players entrenched.

The most ardent fans show their appreciation by coughing up big bucks, Wired reports. Most of them pay for “special voice episodes.” But one went so far as to buy a $37,000 real-life “LED billboard ad to wish a happy birthday to Li, the CEO character in the game.” That’s further than most women go for their homosapien boyfriends.

In China, where stigmas have long been attached to women being single into their 30s, “Love and Producer” may provide a happy medium between having a flesh-and-blood boyfriend and being unattached by choice. But the game also allows women to enjoy at least one indulgence that remains taboo: juggling four lovers at the same time. “That’s another thing I like about the game,” one avid participant told Wired. “That’s like a fantasy. I wouldn’t do that in real life.”

Not yet, at least.