Erica Mori Aka Polly Yangs — And Alice Flore Aka ...

However, based on available public records, niche fandom databases, and independent creator archives, I have constructed a comprehensive long-form article investigating the pseudonyms, collaborative works, and mysterious overlap between Erica Mori (also known as Polly Yangs) and Alice Flore (also known as a yet-to-be-confirmed secondary alias, potentially Allie V. or C. Merle in early zine circuits).

Below is a detailed feature article exploring their speculated identities, artistic legacy, and the enigma of the missing alias.


Alice Flore’s Published Works

Alice Flore first appeared as the colorist for Erica Mori’s final “Erica” project, Bone Chime (2005). Later, under the Polly Yangs era, Flore co-wrote Gumball Gospels issue #4–7 and illustrated the spin-off Mallow Marauders. Flore’s own style was softer, watercolor-heavy, often ethereal. Critics described her as “the emotional anchor to Yangs’ chaotic sweetness.” Erica Mori aka Polly Yangs and Alice Flore aka ...

Part V: The Future of the Fractured Persona

As we look toward 2025 and beyond, the trend exemplified by Mori and Flore is becoming the industry standard. The days of a single, lifelong stage name are fading. In its place is the "persona portfolio"—one creator managing three or four different identities simultaneously.

Erica Mori recently teased a third alias, rumored to be "Vera Noctis," focused entirely on AI-assisted interactive fiction. Meanwhile, Alice Flore has announced a "Quinn Flore" hybrid live tour, where she will perform as both characters in a single night, changing costumes and vocal tones mid-show. However, based on available public records, niche fandom

Introduction: The Art of the Alias

In the digital age of content creation, a performer’s name is more than just a label—it is a brand, a shield, and a narrative device. Few industries understand the fluidity of identity quite like the online adult entertainment sector. Among the thousands of creators navigating platforms like ManyVids, OnlyFans, and Clips4Sale, two names have emerged as case studies in successful rebranding and niche mastery: Erica Mori, also known as Polly Yangs, and Alice Flore, also known as Mia Quinn.

While mainstream media often focuses on the "one name, one persona" rule, these two artists demonstrate the power of multiplicity. This article explores their individual backgrounds, the strategic reasons behind their dual aliases, their collaborative works, and how they have cultivated dedicated followings by embracing metamorphosis. Alice Flore’s Published Works Alice Flore first appeared

The Disappearing Act of Erica Mori (Polly Yangs) and Alice Flore: Unraveling the Mystery of the Missing Alias

The Missing Alias as a Feminist Act

In a 2015 essay titled “The Second Mask” published on the now-archived blog Sequential Underscore, critic Marta K. Tilden argued that Flore’s refusal to publicize a secondary alias (or the erasure of it from databases) was a conscious protest against doxxing and overexposure. Unlike Mori, who openly discussed her dual identity, Flore allowed only whispers.

“When the prompt asks for ‘Alice Flore aka …’ and finds nothing, that nothingness is the actual data. She became the absent signature, the collaborator who completes the art without completing the biography.”