Cosplay OnlyFans Models, Anime Cosplayers and Gamer Girls

Curated by FanFind

Editorial team

Ranked by FanFind signals·No paid placements·Updated: 25 June 2026

How FanFind organises category pages

FanFind category pages are built to make creator discovery easier. We organise profiles using visible category signals, profile information, freshness, and how useful the page is for people browsing that specific niche.

Category match

Profiles are included when their visible details, tags, or page context match the category topic.

Freshness and availability

We aim to keep pages useful by prioritising profiles and pages that appear current, accessible, and relevant.

Discovery usefulness

Pages are structured around what users are likely trying to find, with supporting links to related categories, locations, and guides where helpful.

Cosplay OnlyFans is not one single page type. Some creators build full character sets with repeat costumes, character captions and fandom references. Others use anime, gaming, catgirl, maid, bunny girl, fantasy or goth styling as a visual frame inside a broader creator page. The difference matters because a costume-heavy profile, a roleplay-led profile and a casual themed-shoot profile can look similar from the outside.

Cosplay depth ladder

The fastest way to read a cosplay profile is to check how deep the character work goes. A page can be cosplay-first without being franchise-accurate, but the profile usually gives clues about which level you are opening.

1. Full character production

The page is built around named characters, specific series, costume accuracy, wigs, makeup, poses and repeat sets. Captions often mention the source material, and the creator may show work-in-progress or behind-the-scenes costume details.

2. Costume-led shoot

The costume is central, but accuracy to a franchise is not the main point. The creator rotates anime, gaming, superhero, maid, nurse, catgirl, bunny girl or fantasy looks as themed sets.

3. Scenario and archetype cosplay

The page uses costume roles to set a mood or dynamic. Maid, nurse, bunny girl, vampire, witch, devil, angel, elf, fairy and monster girl pages often sit here when the character is an archetype rather than a named franchise role.

4. Aesthetic borrowing

Anime makeup, gamer girl styling, dyed hair, horns, ears, collars, stockings or fantasy pieces shape the look, but the page is still mainly personality, body type, alt styling or general creator content.

5. Single themed posts

The cosplay tag reflects occasional Halloween shoots, one costume set or a themed PPV drop inside a wider feed. Check recent posts if you want regular character content rather than isolated costume appearances.

Top 10 Cosplay OnlyFans Accounts

Ranked by total likes · Updated monthly

# Creator Known for Price Likes
1 Jessica Nigri @jessicanigri Iconic costume-maker and cosplay creator with a free page, 1.2K posts and a huge photo archive Free
2 Mila Mondell @milamondell Free cosplay and fantasy creator with a massive 7.8K-post archive and strong fan engagement Free
3 Alva Velasco @alvajay High-volume creator with a low paid entry price, 3.9K posts and a polished fan-facing page $3.00
4 Sunny Ray @sunnyrayxo Mega-reach cosplay creator with 1K posts, anime-style visual appeal and a large paid-page following $4.25
5 Marina Mui @marinamui Barcelona cosplay and fantasy creator with 1.3K posts, 587 videos and a strong character-led brand $6.00
6 Amber Rozza @mimsyheart Waifu and fantasy-roleplay creator with 1.9K posts, cosplay-heavy themes and strong niche engagement $4.00
7 Sweetie Fox @sweetiefox_of Cute cosplayer with fox-girl branding, 1.8K posts and one of the deepest photo libraries in the category $3.00
8 Mariah Mallad @momokun IRL hentai-girl cosplayer with photos, videos, livestreams and a dedicated character-content angle $5.00
9 Naimi Minai @anaimiya Fantasy-styled creator with 1.2K posts, 3.5K photos and a large video archive $5.00
10 Orphicbunny @orphicbunny Bunny-styled fantasy creator with a focused paid page, 706 posts and strong cosplay-adjacent appeal $12.50

Source material quick map

Cosplay browsing often starts with the world the creator is drawing from. Use this quick map to separate fandom-heavy profiles from broader costume and persona pages.

Anime and manga
Anime cosplay, manga characters, waifu personas, original anime-inspired looks, hentai-inspired styling where creators use that language themselves, catgirl styling and character-driven shoots.
Games and streamers
Gaming cosplay, gamer girl pages, streamer crossover, character outfits, controller or setup content and egirl overlap.
Superhero and sci-fi
Superhero cosplay, comic characters, space fantasy, sci-fi uniforms, villain looks and recognisable franchise styling.
Fantasy and gothic
Vampire, witch, elf, fairy, demon, devil, angel, succubus, monster girl, dark fantasy and goth cosplay routes.
Roleplay archetypes
Maid, nurse, bunny girl, catgirl, princess, office, uniform, cosplay JOI and scenario-led costume pages.

Waifu, anime and original character pages

Waifu is creator and fan language for an idealised anime-inspired persona. On OnlyFans, it often means the creator has built a repeat character identity rather than copying one existing franchise role. A waifu page may use an original name, repeat outfit colours, lore, captions, character voice and anime styling across multiple posts.

Anime cosplay is not the same thing as an Asian creator category. Some Asian creators use anime, waifu or Japanese pop-culture framing, but anime cosplay also appears across many creator identities. Treat the source material and the creator identity as separate profile signals unless the creator connects them directly.

Character and costume type matrix

When a general cosplay page is too broad, the costume type usually tells you what kind of profile you are opening. This matrix separates character accuracy, roleplay framing, craft signals and creator crossover lanes.

Costume or character type What it signals about the page
Catgirl, bunny girl, maid and nurse Scenario and archetype lanes rather than strict franchise cosplay. Cat ears, bunny suits, maid outfits, nurse looks and uniform styling usually tell you more about tone, roleplay setup and visual framing than source material accuracy.
Gamer girl and egirl cosplay Gaming cosplay often overlaps with streamer culture, egirl styling and internet personality. Look for specific games, controller or setup content, headset imagery, character outfits and casual gamer girl posts.
Fantasy, gothic and monster girl Vampire, witch, demon, devil, succubus, angel, elf, fairy and monster girl pages sit between cosplay, fantasy and alt styling. Goth OnlyFans is the closer route when dark styling, witchy themes or gothic persona matter more than a single character.
Homemade, craft and studio cosplay Homemade costumes, work-in-progress posts, wig styling, props and craft notes signal a different page from polished studio shoots using purchased costumes. Neither format is automatically better, but they set different expectations.
Custom requests and roleplay Custom character requests, themed PPV, roleplay scripts, cosplay JOI and DM-led scenarios depend on creator availability. Check the bio or pinned post for customs before subscribing if a specific character request matters.
Body-type cosplay BBW cosplay, petite cosplay, big tits cosplay and big ass cosplay are not only costume searches. They combine character work with a specific body-type preference, so preview images and bio language usually matter as much as the source material. BBW OnlyFans, Big Tits OnlyFans and Big Ass OnlyFans cover those creator lanes more broadly.
Creator identity crossovers Latina cosplay, ebony cosplay, MILF cosplay, mature cosplay, femboy cosplay and trans cosplay are useful when the creator lane matters as much as the costume. Look for creator self-description, repeated character choices and whether the page treats cosplay as a regular format. Latina OnlyFans, Ebony OnlyFans, MILF OnlyFans and Trans OnlyFans cover adjacent creator categories.

How to read a cosplay profile before subscribing

Cosplay previews can look strong even when the page only posts themed sets occasionally. These checks help separate a cosplay-first creator from a general creator using costumes sometimes.

Character names Specific anime, game, comic or fantasy names in bios and captions usually signal deeper cosplay intent than broad costume words alone.
Repeat costumes A feed with multiple costumes, recurring characters and themed post sets is different from one Halloween shoot inside a general catalogue.
Craft details Wig styling, prop work, costume making, behind-the-scenes posts and progress shots are useful signs when craft matters to you.
Custom availability Character requests, custom cosplay videos and themed PPV are not automatic. Look for explicit custom wording before assuming the creator takes requests.
Source vs scenario A named anime character and a maid roleplay set are both cosplay-adjacent, but they work differently. Decide whether you want source material or scenario framing.
Free page structure Free cosplay pages may use the feed for previews while full themed sets sit behind PPV. Check pinned posts and recent activity before assuming the free tier includes complete costume shoots.

For open-access cosplay pages, Free OnlyFans includes creators across categories. Check whether cosplay appears in the main feed, in PPV messages, in custom requests or only in occasional preview posts.

Common questions

Cosplay OnlyFans covers cosplayers and creators who use costume, character identity, fandom references or roleplay archetypes as part of their page. That includes anime and manga cosplay, gaming characters, waifu personas, superhero looks, fantasy themes, catgirl and bunny girl styling, maid outfits and original character work. Some pages are built around full character production, while others use cosplay as one recurring content lane inside a broader creator profile.

Waifu is creator and fan language for an idealised anime-inspired persona. On OnlyFans, a waifu page usually means the creator has built a repeat character style around anime, gaming or original character design. It may include a character name, consistent colours, specific outfits, persona-led captions and ongoing visual themes rather than a one-time costume shoot.

Cosplay starts with costume and character presentation. Roleplay starts with the scenario or interaction. There is overlap, especially with maid, nurse, bunny girl, catgirl and fantasy archetypes. A profile is more cosplay-led when costumes, characters and visual references repeat across the feed. It is more roleplay-led when the main draw is the scenario, script, DM interaction or custom request format.

Some do. Homemade cosplay, prop work, wig styling, outfit alterations and craft progress can be part of the page. Other creators use purchased costumes or studio-style sets. If the craft side matters, look for work-in-progress posts, behind-the-scenes notes, costume details or captions that explain how the creator built the look.

Sometimes, but it depends on the creator. Custom cosplay requests usually require more time than a standard custom video because the creator may need a costume, wig, makeup plan or specific setup. Check the bio or pinned post for custom character requests, themed PPV or DM request wording before subscribing if a specific character is the main thing you want.

Yes. Free cosplay pages can be useful for previews, but the full costume set may sit behind PPV, tips or custom requests. A free page is strongest when recent posts make it clear how often cosplay appears and whether complete themed sets are included in the feed or unlocked separately.