This thesis consists of four self-contained works that are organised by chapter. They are arranged roughly in the chronological order that I worked on them. I provide a short abstract for each below. Chapter 1: The dating game In this chapter, I examine a game-theoretic model of heterosexual courtship. Male-female pairs are randomly matched and decide whether to make romantic advances towards each other. They receive payoffs that depend on the utility from a romantic match, and the costs of rejection and unwanted advances/harassment. The game has three interesting Nash equilibria: the M↔I equilibrium where males always play the initiator role and females never do, the F↔I equilibrium where females always play the initiator role and males ne...