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Cosplay, Comfort, and Mental Health Awareness Month

April 24th, 2026

James Shu Plutonic CEO

By James Shu, Founder and CEO of Plutonic

 

Having gone to dozens of cosplay and gaming festivals throughout the years, I keep coming back to one thought. People feel comfortable here.

In the cosplay community, people show up as themselves, or sometimes as a version of themselves they have not felt safe expressing anywhere else. There is no pressure to explain who you are. You just exist in it.

That matters more than we think.

A lot of mental health barriers come from one thing. Feeling judged.

Psychological safety, a concept introduced by Carl Rogers, is about feeling accepted and able to be yourself without fear. That is what allows people to actually open up.

I see that happening naturally in cosplay spaces. People talk more. They connect faster. They are not overthinking how they are coming across.

 

It is not therapy. But it is the step before therapy.

During May Mental Health Awareness Month, this is what often gets overlooked. Mental health support does not start when someone books a therapy session or from mental health resource awareness. 

For many, mental health support starts when someone feels safe enough to say something real and take the first step in getting support. For some people, that first moment of safety happens in a cosplay festival like MomoCon.

​If you are at MomoCon 2026 this May, stop by the Plutonic booth. We will also be at community mental health events throughout the month, continuing to meet people in spaces where they already feel comfortable.

About Plutonic
Plutonic provides ai powered mental health services including therapy and an ai powered mental health companion tool. The company started by a team of mental health and technology experts. Plutonic is democratizing these technology enabled mental health services to improve individual and family lives. 

 

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