On Saturday night, Angela Hill will step into a cage and punch a woman in the mouth.
If things go to plan, she'll knock her out.
Failing that, she'll choke her, or stretch her limbs to a breaking point.
Inside the cage, she is fierce. Outside, she likes sewing.
As well as being a mixed martial artist, Angela is a cosplayer - someone who dresses-up as characters from films, TV, cartoons, or computer games.
She spends days - sometimes weeks - on her costumes. She can spend hours at a time drawing costume designs.
It doesn't quite match her fighting nickname, "Overkill".
"I'm bringing different worlds together," she says, laughing.
The rise of cosplay
Cosplay is a hobby - the term is short for costume play Cosplayers become a character by buying costumes, or making their own
Conventions such as Comic-Con attract tens of thousands of cosplayers
Angela was an artist before she was a fighter.
She went to Cooper Union, an art school in New York, before working in animation. Aged 24, she was "getting fat, playing video games all day, and eating pizza".
She considered kickboxing. Then someone suggested Muay Thai, another combat sport.
"The rest is history," she says, now aged 30.
In 2016 she was fighting for Invicta, an organisation that encourages fighters to dress-up for weigh-ins.
"I was like, I'm not going to half-ass it," she says. "I'm going to do something really, really dorky."
Angela grew up in Maryland, in a household "where we absolutely did not buy our Halloween costumes".
"We would go to the thrift store and get little pieces," she says. "My mom would help us stitch it together. I've always been DIY, creative."
Before her first Invicta fight, she decided to dress up as a Vault Dweller from Fallout 4, a computer game set in 2287.
"I made the jump-suit, I did all the trimming," she says. "I made myself a Pip-Boy [the character's wearable computer] out of foam and cardboard.
"I even carved a slot so I could stick my [real-life] phone in and use the Pip-Boy app."
After the Vault Dweller weigh-in, Angela won the fight, stopping her opponent in the first round.
For her next weigh-in, Angela became Dhalsim, a character from the Street Fighter game. "The hardest part was making the little skulls," she says.
Angela won that fight too - knocking her opponent out in round two. In fact, the more she dressed up, the more she won.
In 2017, after winning four fights in Invicta, Angela signed to join Ultimate Fighting Championship - the "Premier League" of mixed martial arts.
There was, however, a problem: the UFC have particular rules about what fighters wear at events.
"They have a deal with Reebok," she says. "They give you a bag of stuff to wear at press events and the fight night. It's really strict."
But Angela was undeterred.
At the UFC weigh in, she wore her Reebok gear, added bandages and an eyepatch, and became Sagat, another Street Fighter character.
She even did his trademark laugh and leg-tap.
By now, Angela was as famous for her costumes as her fighting. "I feel like it's something that's more my speed," she says.
"I've never been big on taking sexy photos, or doing crazy talk. That's really not my style. But when it comes to nerding out, that's right up my alley.
"It's a fun way to connect with people while being true to myself. I'm reaching all these random demographics that usually wouldn't cross paths."
And Angela doesn't just wear costumes at weigh-ins.
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