<p align="justify">With his dashing looks, it's little wonder that 28-year-old tycoon Li Zeyan has wooed hundreds of thousands of women across China -- not bad for an avatar in a mobile game.</p>.<p align="justify">Li is the most popular character in "Love and Producer", a Chinese simulation game that has been downloaded more than 10 million times since debut in December, mostly by women seeking steamy fantasy affairs with its four virtual suitors.</p>.<p align="justify">Its viral popularity has highlighted a huge potential market for the gaming industry in China, where one in four mobile phone gamers is a woman -- numbers that are expected to grow.</p>.<p align="justify">The game, and a separate one also aimed at women in which users can "mother" an intrepid frog character, have leapt into the top ranks of China's most-downloaded mobile games.</p>.<p align="justify">The frenzy over the games has focused attention on China's "she economy" -- the expanding consumer power of its hundreds of millions of smartphone-wielding women -- just as game developers face slowing growth in the gigantic market for battle-and-strategy games aimed largely at Chinese men.</p>.<p align="justify">In "Love and Producer", players choose from four Prince Charmings -- business CEO Li, a scientist, a special agent and a famous singer -- attractive "catches" that tap into the rising relationship expectations of Chinese millennial women.</p>.<p align="justify">"Love and Producer" now also offers the chance to have a virtual fling while sitting on the bus, said Liu Yixuan, a 19-year-old university student.</p>.<p align="justify">"A third of my friends play the game and many insist on calling themselves Li's 'wife,'" Liu said.</p>.<p align="justify">"I'm intrigued by the characters' good looks and the graphics, but other 'wives' are obsessed with talking to their 'husband', who will reply with sweet words in a deep and attractive voice."</p>.<p align="justify">Created by Nikki Games, a developer in eastern China, it was patterned on Japanese "otome", or "maiden" games, simulated-romance worlds generally aimed at women.</p>.<p align="justify">In "Love and Producer", the player runs a fictional TV production company that they must save from bankruptcy, all while dating one or more of the male love interests.</p>.<p align="justify">Players complete tasks which allow them to collect cards that are in turn needed to realise a successful TV show -- or an eventful "date" with one's lover. Cards can also be purchased. Steamy embraces occur, though the action stops there.</p>.<p align="justify">In the "real" world, one unidentified fan wished Li Zeyan a happy birthday in a giant illuminated message projected on a skyscraper in the southern city of Shenzhen on January 13, a pricey stunt likely to have cost tens of thousands of yuan (several thousand dollars).</p>.<p align="justify" class="byline">AFP</p>
<p align="justify">With his dashing looks, it's little wonder that 28-year-old tycoon Li Zeyan has wooed hundreds of thousands of women across China -- not bad for an avatar in a mobile game.</p>.<p align="justify">Li is the most popular character in "Love and Producer", a Chinese simulation game that has been downloaded more than 10 million times since debut in December, mostly by women seeking steamy fantasy affairs with its four virtual suitors.</p>.<p align="justify">Its viral popularity has highlighted a huge potential market for the gaming industry in China, where one in four mobile phone gamers is a woman -- numbers that are expected to grow.</p>.<p align="justify">The game, and a separate one also aimed at women in which users can "mother" an intrepid frog character, have leapt into the top ranks of China's most-downloaded mobile games.</p>.<p align="justify">The frenzy over the games has focused attention on China's "she economy" -- the expanding consumer power of its hundreds of millions of smartphone-wielding women -- just as game developers face slowing growth in the gigantic market for battle-and-strategy games aimed largely at Chinese men.</p>.<p align="justify">In "Love and Producer", players choose from four Prince Charmings -- business CEO Li, a scientist, a special agent and a famous singer -- attractive "catches" that tap into the rising relationship expectations of Chinese millennial women.</p>.<p align="justify">"Love and Producer" now also offers the chance to have a virtual fling while sitting on the bus, said Liu Yixuan, a 19-year-old university student.</p>.<p align="justify">"A third of my friends play the game and many insist on calling themselves Li's 'wife,'" Liu said.</p>.<p align="justify">"I'm intrigued by the characters' good looks and the graphics, but other 'wives' are obsessed with talking to their 'husband', who will reply with sweet words in a deep and attractive voice."</p>.<p align="justify">Created by Nikki Games, a developer in eastern China, it was patterned on Japanese "otome", or "maiden" games, simulated-romance worlds generally aimed at women.</p>.<p align="justify">In "Love and Producer", the player runs a fictional TV production company that they must save from bankruptcy, all while dating one or more of the male love interests.</p>.<p align="justify">Players complete tasks which allow them to collect cards that are in turn needed to realise a successful TV show -- or an eventful "date" with one's lover. Cards can also be purchased. Steamy embraces occur, though the action stops there.</p>.<p align="justify">In the "real" world, one unidentified fan wished Li Zeyan a happy birthday in a giant illuminated message projected on a skyscraper in the southern city of Shenzhen on January 13, a pricey stunt likely to have cost tens of thousands of yuan (several thousand dollars).</p>.<p align="justify" class="byline">AFP</p>