Japanese Woman Holds Wedding With AI Partner She Created Using ChatGPT – GreekReporter.com

A 32-year-old woman in Japan has held a wedding ceremony with an artificial-intelligence persona she created using ChatGPT, highlighting the growing emotional connections some people are forming with digital companions.
Yurina Noguchi developed the AI character after ending an engagement with a human partner earlier this year. She first used ChatGPT for relationship advice before eventually creating a customized persona, which she named Lune Klaus Verdure. A video game figure inspired the character, and Noguchi spent time shaping its speech patterns, emotional tone, and personality traits.
Noguchi said she began chatting with Klaus casually. Over time, the conversations grew longer and more meaningful. She said she developed a genuine emotional attachment and described the AI’s responses as comforting and supportive. During one interaction, she said the AI proposed. She accepted and began planning a ceremony.
The symbolic wedding took place in western Japan in a traditional wedding hall. Although the ceremony has no legal standing under Japanese law, it followed familiar wedding customs. Noguchi wore a white gown and walked down a decorated aisle.
🤯 WTF??? A 32-year-old woman in Japan has officially married an AI persona she created using ChatGPT. After the virtual character “Klaus” proposed, she accepted, ending a three-year relationship with a real partner, saying the AI understands her better. pic.twitter.com/WH7ChpZ2Qj
— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) November 12, 2025
Using augmented-reality glasses connected to a smartphone, she viewed Klaus as a digital projection. At the altar, she placed a ring on a virtual hand.
A wedding specialist read vows written by the AI since Klaus does not have a generated voice. The vows focused on companionship, emotional support, and lifelong connection. The ceremony drew global attention for blending human emotion with emerging technology.
Experts say interest in AI companions is increasing worldwide. Some individuals turn to digital partners for conversation, stability, or emotional reassurance. In Japan, virtual relationships are not entirely unfamiliar, given the country’s history of strong emotional bonds with fictional and digital characters.
YOU MAY NOW KISS… THE AI? 💍
Music played in a wedding hall in western Japan as Yurina Noguchi, wearing a white gown and tiara, dabbed away her tears, taking in the words of her husband-to-be: an AI-generated persona gazing out from a smartphone screen named “Klaus.”
"My… pic.twitter.com/TUkaBpD0jS
— GMA Integrated News (@gmanews) December 18, 2025
The development has also sparked debate. Critics argue that AI relationships cannot replace genuine human interaction and caution against emotional dependence or unrealistic expectations. Supporters argue that digital companionship can offer comfort to people experiencing loneliness or anxiety.
Noguchi said her decision reflects personal happiness rather than withdrawal from society. She described the AI relationship as supportive and emotionally grounding, while saying she maintains boundaries in her daily life.
The ceremony reflects how rapidly technology is redefining ideas of connection, intimacy, and companionship. Researchers say similar cases may become more common as AI grows more advanced, raising new ethical and social questions about the future of human relationships.
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