My hc about Daft Punk as characters in Apple's TV series Severance below.
!warning!
There may be some mistakes and inaccuracies because it was written using a translator(with AI assistant translator DeepL, text is not made by AI.)
Some whispered rumors within Lumon claim that Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter were once brilliant engineers working for the Severance program. They were tasked with refining the Severance chip, pushing the boundaries of cognitive partitioning.
But something went wrong.
During an unauthorized experiment with prototype of Severance Chip they got shared mind, a seamless fusion of thought and creativity.
Now, they exist in a perpetual limbo—neither Innie nor Outie, but a continuous, unbroken stream of existence. Their helmets serve as neural interfaces, maintaining their balance between worlds. To the outside world, they simply “retired.”
Within Lumon, they became guardians of the Pyramid Division, using music therapy to reshape fractured minds. But instead of serving Lumon, they became something more—self-aware entities that chose to hide in plain sight, using their music to influence the minds of others. The Pyramid Sessions were their attempt to undo the damage of Severance, but Lumon twisted their work into another form of control.
Sometimes after The Pyramid sessions Mark begins having strange dreams—visions of a world beyond Lumon, a neon-lit realm where sound is law and reality bends with the beat. In these dreams, he sees them not as men, nor as machines, but as something else entirely—cosmic architects, shaping the fabric of existence through rhythm and melody.
So who are they really?
Daft Punk do not confirm or deny, they do not hurt or heal.
They simply watch and observe.
Their bond is one of the greatest mysteries within The Pyramid Division. No one at Lumon has ever seen them apart. They move in perfect unison, anticipating each other's actions without words.
The employees speculate endlessly about their connection. Some employees whisper that they were once husbands before work at Lumon Industries, others believe they chose to merge their individual identities dissolving into a singular, shared consciousness. They are no longer two people-but one mind in two bodies.
How they interact?
- They never speak to each other aloud. Yet, they always move in sync, as if communicating telepathically.
- When one reaches for a control panel, the other's fingers twitch slightly.
- When a session begins, one places a hand on the other's shoulder, a brief, almost imperceptible gesture of reassurance.
- In rare moments of stillness, they face each other, heads tilting slightly-an unspoken conversation passing between them.