Mikomi Hokina moved to a Belgian village of around 200 people. Her fans found her anyway.
The 30-year-old built a six-figure business out of handmade fantasy armour, goth cosplay and online content, with a devoted following under @mikomihokina.
She recently swapped Brussels for somewhere much quieter, on the reasonable assumption that fewer people would clock her in the cereal aisle.
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That is not how it has gone.
A selfie she never agreed to
She gets recognised at airports, on flights, in her local supermarket.

Most of it is fine. Some of it is not.
“I’ve had two encounters recently, one was weird and one was positive,” she said.
The weird one happened at 5am, boarding a plane with her family.
“They were like, ‘Are you Miko?’ but it was 5am and I was with family, so I said I wasn’t,” she said.
“I was trying to deflect, like ‘abort mission,’ but this person didn’t care. He put his arm around me and took a selfie without even asking.”
The polite ones do exist

Then there was the flight attendant. He recognised her as she boarded, then messaged her on Instagram first to ask for an autograph.
He checked it was alright to come over with a card and pen.
“He was actually very, very sweet,” she said. “It was a very wholesome interaction.”
The difference, she says, comes down to context.
“If it’s 5am and I’m with my family, it’s very likely I’m going to tell you, ‘No, I’m not Miko,'” she said.
“But if someone is polite and respectful, I don’t mind at all.”

Even the village hasn’t stayed quiet. One neighbour turned up with a commission.
“A neighbour came by with a little keychain weapon from an anime,” she said.
“It was a little kunai from Naruto and she asked if I could make her a bigger one.”
A kunai is the throwing blade favoured by the ninja in the long-running series, which gives a sense of the clientele.
Two university dropouts and a Playboy documentary

Mikomi quit university twice before going all in on creative work.
The armour came later, and it pays. Her hyper-realistic costumes and handcrafted pieces are known across Europe’s cosplay scene, with individual commissions selling for as much as £10,000. The business now turns over six figures.
Some of the recognition traces back to one thing.
“A few years ago Playboy and national TV did a documentary about my job, creating fantasy costumes and content online, which aired on television, radio and online,” she said.
“I think that’s one of the reasons people know who I am.”

She makes content for her OnlyFans subscribers and for herself.
Not all of it involves elf ears and resin.
“Just buy what you feel is pretty”
Her look, by her own description, is “a bit of everything.”
One day it is full fantasy armour. The next it is cat ears, or a vintage flower dress.
“I love cosplaying, but I love trying a lot of different styles,” she said.
“One day it can be cat ears and casual or a vintage flower dress. I feel like with dressing up you shouldn’t stick to only one style. You should just buy what you feel is pretty then go for it.”
Why It Matters

Anonymity is something creators give away without quite meaning to.
Mikomi’s case shows recognition following the brand rather than the postcode, and a niche audience can be smaller and more intense than a mainstream one.
The fan who can identify you at 5am in an airport is also the fan who funds a six-figure business.
That closeness pays the bills and turns up uninvited, often in the same week.
The tension between public persona and private life has become a defining feature for creators who sell their identity directly, especially on subscription platforms where intimacy is part of the offer.
Mikomi seems to have already worked out whether a village of 200 buys any real distance. The fans know where she shops.
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