Social Fiction Lives Here

There's a moment when traditional social media stops fitting.

You want to create.

You want to express identity differently.

You want to exist beyond a single version of yourself.

That's where Social Fiction begins.

And it lives here.

Masquerading is built for people who see identity as creative space — whether that means creating an original character, dressing as Elvis for a tribute night, going full 80s for a decades party, or turning up to Rocky Horror in fishnets and pearls.

What Is Social Fiction?

Social Fiction is the expression of identity through personas in a social environment designed for story-led interaction.

In simple terms:

  • You don't perform for algorithms.
  • You express through characters.
  • You don't fragment yourself.
  • You explore new dimensions of who you can be.

And you do it in a space designed to understand that.

Personas in motion – expressing identity through characters
Express through characters. Explore new dimensions.

Not Just Roleplay. Not Just Cosplay. Not Social Media.

Masquerading exists because none of those fully fit.

Roleplay is often temporary and scene-based.

Cosplay is visual and event-driven.

Themed parties are fleeting — the night ends, and the costume goes back in the wardrobe.

Traditional social media rewards sameness and simplicity.

Social Fiction is different.

It's persistent.

Identity-led.

Community-aware.

Built for everyone who dresses up — whether you have an original character, a LARP persona, or you turn up in full costume to every Grease night and tribute event going.

Built for Creative Identity

Masquerading is designed for people who think in layers.

People who:

  • Build original characters
  • Love fandom worlds
  • Dress up for themed parties, decades nights, and tribute events
  • Turn up to Rocky Horror, Grease, or The Greatest Showman in full costume
  • Explore alternate personas
  • Want more than algorithm-driven platforms

Here, identity isn't flattened.

It's expanded.

Creative identity – built for people who think in layers
Built for creators who love fandom worlds.

Why Masquerading Exists

Most platforms weren't designed for imaginative identity.

They prioritise:

  • Trends over depth
  • Virality over meaning
  • Consistency over creativity

Masquerading flips that model.

Here:

  • Personas are normal
  • Story-led identity is understood
  • Creative expression is expected

You don't need to explain yourself here.

A Different Kind of Social Space

Masquerading isn't trying to replace social media.

It's creating a new category.

A space where:

  • You can exist as a persona
  • Characters evolve over time
  • Creative identity is respected
  • Community understands the language

This is Social Fiction in motion.

A different kind of social space – community in costume
A space where creative identity is respected.

Who It's For

Masquerading resonates with people who have always felt slightly ahead of the curve.

You'll feel at home here if you:

  • Love cosplay and fandom culture
  • Dress up for themed parties — 80s nights, decades events, fancy dress
  • Go as Elvis, Freddie Mercury, a Pink Lady, or just full decades attire
  • Love cinema screenings in costume — Rocky Horror, Grease, The Greatest Showman
  • Build characters, alter-egos, or original personas
  • Enjoy immersive communities
  • Want to find events and connect with people who love dressing up

You don't need an original character name. You don't need to LARP or cosplay.

If you've got a costume, you belong here.

Where Personas Become Real

Social Fiction needs the right container.

Without it, creativity gets misunderstood.

Flattened.

Or filtered away.

Masquerading exists to give that creativity a home.

A place where:

  • Personas are welcomed
  • Expression is fluid
  • Identity is multidimensional

Not niche.

Not strange.

Normal.

This Is Just the Beginning

We believe identity-led platforms are only just starting.

The future of digital expression is:

  • More layered
  • More creative
  • More personal

Masquerading sits at the start of that shift.

Not following a trend.

Helping define a category.

Step Into Social Fiction

If you've been searching for a space where costume culture, themed parties, tribute nights, cinema screenings, and creative identity all belong, you're in the right place.

Masquerading isn't about becoming someone else.

It's about exploring more of who you already are — one costume at a time.

Welcome to Social Fiction.

Welcome to Masquerading.

Social Fiction FAQ

What is Social Fiction?

Social Fiction is the expression of identity through creative personas in a social environment designed for story-led interaction. It allows people to explore layered identity through characters or alter-egos that evolve over time within a community built for creative expression.

Is Social Fiction roleplay?

Not exactly. Roleplay is usually temporary and scene-based. Social Fiction is identity-led and persistent. Instead of stepping into a short interaction, participants build and evolve personas over time within a social environment designed for long-form creative identity.

Is Masquerading a social network?

Masquerading is a social platform, but it is not traditional social media. It is built around creative identity and personas rather than personal branding. The platform is designed specifically for Social Fiction, where layered identity and character-led interaction are normal.

Do I need a costume or a character name to participate?

No character name required. If you dress up for themed parties, tribute nights, Rocky Horror screenings, or already cosplay — you're already Masquerading. Some people create original characters, others dress as Elvis or Freddie Mercury, others just go full 80s. Your costume is your character.

Can I have multiple personas?

Yes. Social Fiction recognises that identity can be layered. Many participants explore multiple personas or characters that reflect different creative expressions. The environment supports evolving and dynamic identity rather than limiting people to a single version of themselves.

Got a costume? Create your profile. Find your next event. Step into Social Fiction.

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