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The Future of Fake: Why AI-Generated Influencers Are Gaining Real Fans

by NkmarvelJune 27th, 2025
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Discover how AI-generated influencers are taking over social media in 2025—leading trends in fashion, music, and branding with real engagement and viral success.

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In 2025, influence is no longer limited to humans. AI-generated influencers—digital personas powered by artificial intelligence, CGI, and data-driven personality design—are becoming the new faces of fashion, music, and social media. These virtual creators are amassing real followers, securing major brand deals, and even earning fan devotion that rivals that of their human counterparts.



So why are people falling in love with influencers that don’t exist?

Let’s break it down.


Perfectly Designed to Influence

AI influencers aren't just faces—they're replicas of clever brand machines, created through the synthesis of teams of 3D artists, AI developers, and marketing strategists, designed for maximum engagement. Example: female digital character Lil Miquela created by Brud (a tech startup acquired by Dapper Labs) modeled for Prada, appeared in Calvin Klein ads, and released music on Spotify.  Lil Miquela has had over 3 million Instagram users follow her, with no human characteristics.

As fully digital, they require no deadlines, age, and cannot get into scandals (unless scripted). They can be changed and updated to fit trends, customer feedback, and platform algorithms. In short, they're controllable, customizable, and brand-focused all the time.

Brands cannot curate human influencers like this because they have their habits, scandals, and creative limitations. For brands, AI creators are like a marketing dream team packaged into a single CGI face.

And for consumers? Many appreciate the comforting, flawless consistency.


Why Fans Actually Connect?

It’s easy to assume that no one cares about influencers who aren’t “real.” In reality, however, it’s even more complicated. Research shows that many fans express an emotional bond with AI personas even while acknowledging they are not real. 

This is not new psychology, however. People have always developed feelings toward fictions, like anime characters, video game characters, or even reality TV stars. AI influencers are working through a similar emotional structure, but they also display behaviors that mimic real social media users. They post selfies. They post emotional captions. They comment on posts that respond to what is trending on social media. They even interact in direct messages. It is pretty futuristic for fans to feel like they are following their favorite content creator without any of the drawbacks. 

Aitana Lopez, who was Spain's first influencer that was fully AI-generated, has quickly become a top influencer thanks to clever and planned narratives. Her posts explore ideas that many find relatable, like self-love, burnout, problems with relationships, or is more than eye candy. She is an entire narrative contained in a digital form.


According to a 2024 Deloitte study, over 40% of Gen Z reported they “don’t care whether an influencer is real as long as the content is good.” In a world dominated by virtual interaction and algorithmic content, emotional realism often beats biological authenticity.


Big Brands, Bigger Paychecks

Let’s get a little more real: the money. AI influencers are banking in real money and brands love the ROI. Since these digital humans are created and managed in-house (or through agencies), they limit the unpredictability and PR headaches that have sometimes co-existed with human content creation.

Shudu, made by British photographer Cameron-James Wilson, is technically the first digital supermodel and has created works with brands such as Balmain and Fenty Beauty. Imma, a Japanese virtual model, has worked with brands like IKEA and has appeared on virtual runways. Aitana Lopez is a luxury fashion creator and influencer who, according to reports, brings in more than $10,000/month in endorsements and digital modeling and limited paid content on platforms like Fanvue (an AI creator platform similar to OnlyFans).

Mathematically, everything works. Brands can run a campaign 24 hours a day, beyond time zones, scheduling conflicts, or personality issues. They can change the look, tone, and message of the influencer to match a different product launch or seasonal theme. With zero physical production, costs are lower, and scalability is endless.


Redefining “Real” on the Internet

The growing influence of computer-generated influencer personas is not merely a fad, and it represents a shift in cultural dynamics. Authenticity and realness are no longer a matter of whether someone is human or not, but whether a figure seems real, offers value, and fits one's aesthetic or worldview.

We have been conditioned to accept parasocial relationships - emotional connections to creators we have no relationship with. AI influencers take this one step further: they are designed to elicit emotion, resonance, and engagement, similarly to characters in a fictional world, but present in social media form.

That said, there are implications. AI influencers raise important ethical questions on body standards (they are often designed with impossible physical attributes), creative labor disasters, and entertainment and manipulation (in a blurred context). At the same time, they also offer creative possibilities for marginalized voices who can use AI avatars to represent themselves without having to deal with personal safety and privacy.

 Ultimately, we are witnessing a redefinition of what it means to “influence.” By 2025, being “real” may be less important than being relevant, algorithm-friendly, and having resonance.



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