The Split but it’s actually just Moceit getting a divorce and having an odd number of children so they cut one in half.

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The Split but it’s actually just Moceit getting a divorce and having an odd number of children so they cut one in half.
Okay so there was this poll about why Volt actually has a British accent, and while I do think it's funny to think Eddie just really likes British accents, I have a legit headcanon that I wanted to make my own post about:
The actual answer, at least in my head, is the first objects Volt probably met, just because of proximity's sake and their jobs were probably Dorian and Tony. And I imagine that when Volt first formed, he sounded exactly like Eddie and it freaked him the fuck out—I mean, he was already freaked out and exhausted and trying to hold it together for both his and Volt's sake, but the voice thing was really the straw that broke the camel's back so Eddie told him to cut it the fuck out. And Volt is nothing if not adaptable to Eddie's needs.
Tony was out of the question—he annoyed Eddie greatly, and Volt didn't want to be another annoyance to Eddie, so he started listening to Dorian more. He started practicing his syllables, but of course while Dorian is a helpful and friendly guy and he at that point had no reason to be distrustful of Volt, he and Eddie still weren't on the greatest terms, and it was a little weird for this new friend of Eddie's to be copying him all of the sudden. So he told Volt, much politer than Eddie had, "Look mate, I appreciate you takin' an interest and tryin' to make Eddie comfortable during the adjustment period, but don't try to be like everyone else. Your voice is an important tool. Make it your own."
And Volt was still so new at that point, he hadn't really explored being anything other than helpful to Eddie, and he was already in deep with recreating Dorian's accent, but he took Dorian's advice to heart and made his voice his own because it was the first time someone other than Eddie had genuinely reached out to him.
And that's why Volt has a British accent like Dorian, but he has a different dialect/tone.
The Split 1.06
NICOLA WALKER + HANDS || for @farminglesbian The Split Season One and Two
Pencil drawing of Hannah that I did in 2024 but never posted
The Split - Caye Caulker - Belize 🌎 4K link
AHHHHHHHH I CANT RESIST
Okay technically I told myself I wouldn't rewatch Sanders Sides until the week was over but i couldnt resist so I rewatched SvS and POF and the new episode (which i have too many thoughts on so cant talk about that now) and I HAVE THOUGHTS SPECIFICALLY ABOUT ROMAN (and a bit of Remus)
First off rewatching the video made me realise how often Roman looks to Patton especially in SvS where he hesitates to question even a thing Patton says or to even share anything that goes against Patton's views. A stark contrast to SvS which is basically the result of Roman going against being selfless and then inevitable switching up at the end.
And I think I've come to a semi conclusion, Roman is a side most heavily swayed by morals as a direct result of the split. See when creativity is being described as split all the things Thomas was taught was good creativity became Roman so it makes sense that in SvS he makes the decision that Thomas goes to the wedding because he thinks its makes him a good person and by default makes Roman good, despite how it forces him to deny almost his very existence (As Thomas' hopes and dreams). SO in POF when he is told the decision he forced himself to make for 'the greater good' was wrong he becomes hostile to Janus (Who in SvS is constantly complimenting him to get him on his side AND who is called basically the whole time evil). He more than most other sides is effected by the concepts of good and evil drilled into him, because that is what he is born from, he is the direct product of black and white thinking and so trying to change those thoughts, growing up and realising things aren't so black and white makes him question his own existence, his role, his purpose because doesn't that mean he isn't a good person? What does that mean for Remus? Roman who is created almost from these same principles is forced to confront how untrue they are.
Its the equivalent of someone who has grown up religious coming to terms with the fact that maybe their religion, the very basis of themself, something they grew up learning even before they could speak, is not as clear cut as they thought it was. It isn't as black and white as its portrayed, and as someone who can speak first hand about it, it isn't a fun realisation to have. Its messy and it causes you to push boundaries you otherwise never would've, your world is being flipped upside down when you just want a way to bring it back to how it was before. That's the feeling Roman is experiencing.
He and Remus are basically the by-products of religious trauma, a side constantly pushing back every moral Thomas has ever learnt and a side constantly stiving to be the best, be good to please and keep in line with those morals. Remus especially is such a brilliant depiction of this, he makes them uncomfortable for the gore stuff but even when it come to sex, which although quite a natural thing is something all the sides seem to recoil from mostly likely due to purity culture which forces children to belief that sex is inherently bad and wanting to do anything sexual for personal pleasure is wrong. He is an outcome of religious Trauma as much as Roman is, the only difference is that he is aware of it, while Roman isn't.