Fake Shopping Apps Let Korean Users Chase the Thrill Without Spending
A growing trend in South Korea is giving online-shopping addicts the rush of buying without paying. Instead of ordering from sites like Amazon or Walmart, young users are turning to so-called “Dopamine Sites,” apps and websites that imitate e-commerce platforms in minute detail.
The fake stores include hundreds of products, detailed reviews, ratings, filters and promotions. Users can add items to a cart, enter a delivery address and tap an order button. A simulator then shows a courier receiving the order and heading out, with a live map tracking the trip. In the end, nothing arrives at the door and no money is charged to a credit card.
The appeal, according to the article, is the psychological reward of the shopping ritual itself, not the objects bought. Users say the experience delivers excitement, anticipation and a dopamine boost that feels almost identical to a real purchase, even though they know it is fake. For many South Koreans, where living costs are high and advertising is constant, the apps offer both savings and the emotional hit of compulsive shopping.
For now, the phenomenon is spreading mainly in South Korea, one of the world’s most digital countries and a highly developed online retail market. Reactions in Western social networks such as Reddit suggest the trend may not travel well there, because users are less interested in spending time on a fake shopping experience. Experts also warn that, despite saving money, the sites may reinforce the same habits that make online shopping addictive in the first place.