An app called "Are You Dead?" is going viral among people living alone

Alfonso Maruccia

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Staff
In context: A new Chinese app is quietly climbing the charts on mobile app stores. Its premise is simple – and unsettling by design: users "check in" once a day to confirm they're still alive and well. The developers say the tool is meant to make life safer for people who live alone, tapping into a growing sense of isolation in modern life.

The app, called Demumu, was released by Moonscape Technologies in May 2025 and has since seen an unexpected surge in popularity. The name is a piece of Chinese wordplay that roughly translates to "Are You Dead?" – a blunt framing that reflects the app's core function. Moonscape positions Demumu as a lightweight safety companion for people living on their own.

Demumu requires no account creation or login. Users simply provide basic information for an emergency contact, such as a name and email address. Once set up, the app prompts users to tap a large green button each day to signal that they're safe. If a check-in is missed, Demumu automatically sends an alert to the designated contact.

The app targets a broad range of solo dwellers. "Whether you're a solo office worker, a student living away from home, or someone choosing a solitary lifestyle, Demumu serves as your safety companion," the app's description reads.

Not everyone is sold on the app's darkly catchy name, and Moonscape is reportedly considering a rebrand to strike a more reassuring tone. According to feedback cited by the BBC, Demumu has gained particular traction among Chinese users, both domestically and abroad. It has also begun trending in markets including the United States, Singapore, Hong Kong, Australia, and Spain.

Demumu initially launched as a free download, but Moonscape has since introduced a modest installation fee – one that many users appear willing to pay. Among them is Wilson Hou, a 38-year-old living in Beijing for work, who says he worries about dying alone while separated from his family. He has configured the app to notify his mother if he fails to complete a daily check-in.

Moonscape's developers say Demumu was built with minimal investment, but the company now sees room to expand both its ambitions and its audience. Its next target is an app aimed at elderly users, a significant opportunity in China, where more than one-fifth of the population is already aged 60 or older.

In a world where living alone is increasingly common, Demumu's early success suggests that even the simplest digital rituals like tapping a button once a day can offer a measure of reassurance. Whether that's comforting or dystopian may depend on who's doing the checking in.

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I beat them to the punch. If I am not heard from they know I've croaked. It's important that they know so my dog gets looked after. I won't need the help. You don't need this app but it will make someone's top ten must have list
 
Its essential a dead man's switch, it must be pushed at least once a day. It reminds me of the button that had to be pushed on the TV show "Lost" or the world would end.
 
This reminds me of a somber story about an elderly friend group that used a group text in which they all chime in the morning... both as a friendly gesture/ritual but also as a check in to confirm everyone woke up that day and were not otherwise incapacitated.
 
It would be cool if they could hook it up to your smart watch that has a heartbeat monitor so that if your heartbeat stops it'll notify the app automatically and then save you the hassle of pressing the button each day
 
Tbf, for those of us living alone who don't really interact with people much outside work, something like this is actually useful.
 
Automated would be OK, but I worry I'd forget to press the button some days and then my loved would be alarmed for nothing. This would be good as part of a smart watch.
 
It would be cool if they could hook it up to your smart watch that has a heartbeat monitor so that if your heartbeat stops it'll notify the app automatically and then save you the hassle of pressing the button each day
not a hard thing to do on android or iphone actually, just needs permissions allowed. Submit a feature request.
 
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