Annie Guo spent many nights during 2025 in a sci-fi universe slaying monsters with her artificial video-game boyfriends: a merman, a space gangster and a pilot. Meanwhile, her real-life partner was busy losing his soul to Path of Exile 2. It wasn't cheating; it was multitasking.
Annie Guo’s Artificial Infidelity is a confident step forward in her comedy journey, and it shows from the moment she walks on stage. This is a traditional stand-up hour in the best possible way. No props. No costumes. No gimmicks. Just a microphone, a spotlight, and a comedian who knows how to tell a good story. After the success of her debut and the accolades she has collected over the past few years, Annie arrives with a set that feels polished, personal, and grounded in her own lived experiences.
The show opens with a short, playful medley of video game clips that introduces the concept of her artificial boyfriends. It is a fun and clever way to frame the evening, giving the audience a taste of the digital romance and absurdity that will weave through the hour. But the show is not really about A.I. dating. It is about relationships in every form. Relationships with men. With New Zealanders. With her parents. With her culture. With technology. With herself. Annie uses the idea of artificial boyfriends as a loose anchor, but the real heart of the show is her exploration of human connection.
Annie’s comedic style has shifted since her earlier work. She has moved away from heavy crowdwork and audience participation, choosing instead to lean into a one-sided conversational style that feels warm and inviting. The connection is still there, but without the pressure of being part of the act. The audience gets to relax, laugh, and enjoy the stories without worrying about being pulled into the spotlight. Annie still reacts to the room, still acknowledges people, still throws in the occasional comment about someone’s outfit or expression, but it is gentle and playful. The camaraderie she builds with the crowd is genuine.
Her observational humour is the backbone of the show. Annie has a talent for taking everyday experiences and turning them into sharp, funny anecdotes. She talks about cultural differences between Chinese and New Zealand families with affection and honesty. She compares male and female perspectives with a light touch that never feels mean-spirited. She pokes fun at generational gaps, political divides, and the strange rituals of modern dating. Everything is buoyant, warm, and delivered with a smile that makes even the sharper jokes feel friendly.
The narrative structure of the show is clear and well-paced. Annie moves smoothly between topics, using relationships as the thread that ties everything together. She talks about her parents with a mix of love and exasperation that resonates with anyone who has ever tried to explain modern life to their family. She talks about dating with a blend of sincerity and silliness that keeps the room laughing. She talks about technology with a sense of curiosity rather than cynicism. The A.I. boyfriends become a metaphor for the ways people seek connection, predictability, and comfort in a world that often feels chaotic.
The first half of the show is particularly strong. Annie keeps the energy high, the jokes tight, and the transitions smooth. The second half loses a little steam, which is understandable given the later time slot. The audience is still engaged, still laughing, but the rhythm softens slightly. Even so, the material remains solid, and the crowd reacts positively to almost everything she throws at them.
There is a touch of self-deprecation throughout the hour, but it never feels forced. Annie uses it to build rapport, to show vulnerability, to let the audience in. She also throws in a few pot shots at the crowd, but they are gentle and well-timed. When everyone laughs together, it feels like a shared moment rather than a targeted jab.
What stands out most is how relatable the show is. Relationships are universal, and Annie taps into that universality with ease. She talks about politics, education, house parties, dating, family pressure, cultural expectations, and the strange ways people try to connect with each other. The content is diverse, but it all fits under the umbrella of human connection. It feels cohesive without being rigid.
Annie’s stage presence is warm and approachable. She has a bubbly charm that reviewers have noted before, but it is paired with a confidence that feels earned. She knows how to hold a room now. She knows how to build a joke, stretch it, twist it, and release it at the right moment. Her timing is sharp. Her delivery is natural. Her writing is stronger than ever.
The show also highlights Annie’s growth as a performer. She has moved from being a crowdwork-heavy comedian to a storyteller with a clear comedic identity. Her accolades from the past few years show that she is on an upward trajectory, and Artificial Infidelity confirms it. She has found a balance between charm and craft, between spontaneity and structure.
By the end of the hour, the audience leaves smiling. The show is warm, funny, and full of heart. Annie Guo is becoming one of the more reliable voices in the local comedy scene, and this show is another step forward. It is a thoughtful, quietly clever hour that blends personal stories with cultural commentary and modern absurdity.
Artificial Infidelity is not just about A.I. boyfriends. It is about the strange, messy, funny ways people try to connect with each other. And Annie Guo tells those stories with honesty, humour, and a charm that makes the whole room feel like they are part of the conversation.
The show is part of the NZ International Comedy Festival. Find tickets to a show near you here
Review written by Alex Moulton













