Dancer's Reward featured Moreno live-mixing a decade of her personal footage and performance documentation, creating what was described as "inter-medial digital Ghosts in a real-time, dream-like sequence". Sleeping Hermaphroditus was a "poem-like durational performance" referencing Bernini's famous marble sculpture, in which Moreno performed the fantasy of the statue while fragmenting her body through live-feed cameras.

Montesino's work under the brand is described as a fusion of digital surrealism and fantasy. Key characteristics of her "trans artist" branding include:

Montesino’s subjects are often beautiful but broken—crushed velvet against peeling wallpaper, rhinestones embedded in scar tissue. She renders transfeminine figures with exaggerated, almost caricatured features (long limbs, sharp hips, cascading hair) but places them in environments of domestic decay: flooded bathrooms, motel rooms with flickering neon signs, or abandoned shopping malls.

Tragically, SOPHIE died on January 30, 2021, at the age of 34 following an accident in Athens, Greece. Her work was not just music; it was a form of world-building, creating a soundscape that felt both synthetic and deeply emotional.

The emergence of creators like Sophia Montesino underscores a vital shift in the global art market. Historically, trans narratives were told through an external, often clinical lens. Artists like Montesino shift the power dynamic, ensuring that trans individuals are the authors of their own stories.

Despite her success, Sophia remained humble and true to her artistic vision. She used her platform to advocate for trans rights and visibility, inspiring countless young artists to express themselves authentically.

Thus, when asking “what Dreamtranny Sophia Montesino is,” the answer is not merely an occupation (artist) but a posture: she is a , a digital shaman using transition as an artistic medium.