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A personal safety application from China, initially known as “Are You Dead?” and now rebranded as Demumu, has recently captured the public’s attention, becoming a viral sensation and sparking widespread media interest.

This surge in popularity reflects broader societal changes, such as significant demographic shifts and evolving dynamics in personal and family relationships. As a result, there is an increasing demand for reliable, non-medical care networks that are easy to use and specifically designed for the growing number of one-person households.

Demumu exemplifies how digital technologies are not only addressing everyday safety concerns but are also influencing and transforming social and cultural norms. With traditional family ties and community support systems becoming less robust, technology is stepping in to fill these voids, seizing the opportunity to adapt to and capitalize on these changes.

Back in mid-2025, three innovative young professionals from Moonscape Technologies introduced this personal safety app with a development cost of approximately 1,500 yuan ($308). Their creation has since evolved into a crucial tool for many, offering a modern solution to the challenges posed by contemporary living.

As traditional kinship ties and community support structures weaken, technology is stepping in to fill — and capitalise on — the gaps.

Demumu’s virality: from local to global

In mid-2025, with a development cost of around 1,500 yuan ($308), three young Chinese professionals from Moonscape Technologies launched a personal safety app called Are You Dead?.

The app was designed to address the safety concerns of China’s growing population of people who live alone. As described on its official store page, the app aims to “protect every solitary moment with simple solutions and build a solid safety line for solo living”.

Users are prompted to click an on-screen button daily or fortnightly via their smartphone to verify they are alive. If a user fails to do so, the system automatically sends email alerts to two nominated emergency contacts.

Shortly after the app’s release, it went viral and quickly became the most downloaded paid app in China.

A 10 per cent stake in the company reportedly increased in value from 1 million yuan ($205,834) to nearly 10 million yuan ($2 million) within three days. This suggests an overall valuation of close to 100 million yuan ($20.57 million) for the developer.

In mid-January 2026, the app rebranded as Demumu as part of a global expansion.

It has now gained traction in more than 40 countries and is ranked near the top in global markets such as the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada.

China is moving towards smaller families and more individualised lives

The 2020 China Population Census showed there were more than 125 million one-person households in China. That’s one in every four households in the country.

Around two-thirds of these solo dwellers are aged between 20 and 59. It is estimated there will be 200 million such households by 2030.

The rapid rise of solo living in China can be attributed to several factors.

First, a growing number of ’empty nest’ older adults. This has been caused by population ageing, and the decline of marriage and fertility while divorce rates rise. These trends have been intensified by longer life expectancy and the legacy of the decades-long One Child Policy.

Second, intimate relationships and family formation have become less attainable for many.

Men are often expected to own a home and a car even at the courtship stage, which is increasingly difficult due to rising living costs and high property prices. ‘Bride prices’ — paid by a man’s family to a woman’s before marriage — are also escalating.

Third, large-scale migration from rural to urban areas and between cities has produced many ‘split households’.

Millions of ’empty-nest youths’ live alone for extended periods under intense work-related pressures before forming or reuniting with families. A common anxiety among this group is ‘disappearing in loneliness’.

Numerous reports have documented ’empty nesters’ who died and were only found days, weeks, or even months later, particularly in gated urban communities. These incidents highlight the vulnerabilities associated with solo living, as well as the absence of trust-based safety networks.

This is a problem Demumu seeks to address.

Moreover, among younger generations in China – particularly highly educated urban women – attitudes towards marriage and singlehood are shifting. Living alone is increasingly a deliberate choice.

Career development and personal autonomy are becoming higher priorities. Many women wish to avoid taking on a disproportionate share of domestic and caregiving responsibilities.

Solo living: a high-potential market

China’s singles economy is booming, and the market still has significant room to grow.

In major metropolitan centres such as Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, products and services tailored to people living alone are more and more visible.

These include one-person hotpot restaurants, single-person karaoke booths, and micro-apartments designed for solo dwellers. Compact household appliances such as mini-fridges, coffee machines, and kettles are also readily available, as well as solo travel packages offered by tourism agencies.

Companionship of various kinds is also on offer. Owning pets — particularly dogs and cats — often plays an important role in the everyday lives of people who live alone.

The intimate services market has also expanded rapidly through digital platforms and smartphone apps. This includes love mentoring and relationship counselling, online dating and digital romance games.

AI-powered chatbot companions and humanoid dolls designed to meet the emotional and relational needs of solo dwellers are also becoming more common.

There’s also an emerging niche business known as date-renting. This practice was initially popularised among young ‘bare branches’ seeking to bring a temporary partner home for Lunar New Year family gatherings.

However, date-renting has since evolved into a personalised service economy in which individuals exchange intimacy, companionship, and dating experiences. In the process, dating is transformed into an ’emotional commodity’, made visible for public consumption and increasingly shaped by platform profiteering.

Together with the emergence of safety apps such as Demumu, these singles-oriented businesses and technologies are energising China’s solo-driven economy.

More importantly, they are also filling the gaps left by shrinking families and increasingly individualised living arrangements. In the process, they are reshaping contemporary social and personal relations and normalising single-centred cultures and lifestyles in everyday life.

Pan Wang is an associate professor in Chinese and Asian Studies at UNSW Sydney.


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