SEOUL, June 22 — If you’ve ever spent 20 minutes scrolling through a food delivery app only to close it without ordering, South Korea’s latest viral app may have been made for you.

Called FoodNeverComes, the app looks and behaves just like any other takeaway platform. Users can browse restaurant menus, customise their orders, enter a delivery address, choose a payment method and even track a courier on the map.

The twist? Nothing is ever cooked, paid for or delivered.

According to Fast Company, the unusual app is part of a growing wave of South Korean “dopamine sites” — digital platforms designed to recreate the thrill of shopping without spending a single cent.

It sounds absurd at first glance, but the idea is rooted in psychology. Dopamine, the brain chemical linked to pleasure and motivation, is often released while anticipating a reward rather than when the reward actually arrives. In theory, simply pressing the “buy” button can satisfy the craving, even if no purchase is ever completed.

The app was created by a South Korean developer known as Malhee, who said the idea came during “one of those nights when I kept opening and closing delivery apps.”

“I started it as a joke at first, but surprisingly, just satisfying that urge to ‘order something’ made it weirdly fulfilling without actually ordering,” Malhee said to Fast Company.

The developer said the app was inspired by a habit many people have developed — opening food delivery apps not because they’re hungry, but simply out of boredom.

“Everyone’s like that these days, right? Not because you’re hungry, but out of habit, boredom, your hand just opens the delivery app first. This app’s made to break that pattern, just once,” Malhee added.

“Anyone who wants to quit delivery apps but can’t, who’s on a diet but keeps reaching for the app, or just wants to check out a quirky app — you’re all welcome.”

The internet, however, has been split over whether the concept is ingenious or just plain depressing.

As screenshots of FoodNeverComes spread across social media over the weekend, many users questioned what the trend says about modern life.

“The world is such a depressing place, man,” one viral post read.

Another quipped that it was “window shopping for people who can’t touch grass.”

Yet not everyone dismissed the idea.

On Reddit, members of a shopping addiction community debated whether apps like FoodNeverComes could actually help curb compulsive spending.

One user compared it to drinking non-alcoholic beer while recovering from alcohol addiction.

“Scratches the itch, especially in the beginning,” they wrote. “You end up moving on from it, but it can be a really helpful stepping stone.”

Others weren’t convinced.

“This would not work for me,” another user wrote. “It would just piss me off knowing nothing is actually coming.”

Perhaps the most memorable description came from one commenter, who likened the experience to “playing pretend for adults.”

“We’re basically experiencing play shopping like a child again,” they wrote.