Split Personality



""There's just one problem... you're talking to the wrong Harvey.""

- Harvey Dent

In real life, Dissociative Identity Disorder (or DID) is a condition believed to be most common among survivors of sexual and/or physical abuse that occurs in their childhood/teenage years. There is some controversy as to whether or not it even exists. Also, those who have it often consider it to be closer to Mind Hive than this trope. As it is understood to modern psychology, the condition is thought to sometimes result when a child/teen copes with abuse by convincing themselves that it's happening to someone else; as such, the trigger is generally some experience the child/teen is trying to dissociate themselves from, by means of creating an "alter" who gets put in charge. Note that without receiving psychological counseling the symptoms will carry over into adulthood. The individual has no control (at least initially) over when the personalities "switch," and may not initially remember what happens to them while they are switched. To put all that in Tropese: you go to your Happy Place while some poor Red Shirt has to deal with the Trauma Conga Line or Humiliation Conga. There are also some individuals who claim to have "healthy," or non-traumatic/trauma-induced, multiplicity, though the existence of that is even more controversial among scientists. More info on healthy multiplicity can be found here.

But that's not entertaining, so television does it differently, and in several different ways. Two (or more) personalities may be sharing memory or not sharing memory or have access to each others' memory as external to their own in symmetric or asymmetric fashion, they can switch at will or involuntary and be in clear war or some form of pact. It even may be the very same personality (i.e. having the very same mind, memory and desires), but changing 'behavior mode' between several clearly distinctive states.

Characters with a Split Personality are surprisingly common in fiction, but most of them don't quite match the textbook definition of DID. In older media, it will often be called "schizophrenia" even by psychologist characters.. (The word schizophrenia literally means "split mind," because a main symptom is scattered, unconnected thoughts. It's more like being on a really bad drug trip, and can actually be induced via crystal meth overdose (caused by too many stimulants in the brain at once) -- but please don't try this at home.)

See also Double Consciousness, Identity Amnesia, Jekyll and Hyde, Super-Powered Evil Side, Split Personality Merge, Split Personality Makeover, Split Personality Takeover and Inner Dialogue. If the split personality is the antagonist, it's the Enemy Within. Shapeshifting is sometimes involved. If the personalities are flipping back and forth, Flip Personality often ensues.

Compare Trauma-Induced Amnesia.

If the two personalities are aware of each other, expect a Gollum Made Me Do It situation to develop. Resolving it may require the weaker of the two to say "I'm Not Afraid of You!" If the Split Personality gets its own body, it becomes either a Literal Split Personality or an Enemy Without (if said personality is antagonistic or evil).

Anime and Manga
"Usopp: * Running away from Perona and Bearsy* "Somebody, save me! Save me!" Sogeking: * Tackling and purifying a goddamn zombie bear* "Save me, Sogeking!""
 * Pictured above: Nyu/Lucy in Elfen Lied. One's has the mental capacities of a small child, the other's an insanely powerful killer out to take out a significant portion of humanity.
 * It seems that most, if not all of the diclonii have a "neutral" personality and their inner voice that tells them to exterminate humans. Especially apparent in Nana's case, where when pushed, will become just as violent as any of the others.
 * One one side we have Misao Amano a Shrinking Violet schoolgirl who transforms (unknowningly and involuntarily) into Pixy Misa, the evil magical girl. however, this trope is subverted when it was revealed in episode 19 that so basically the audience was lead to believe that the Pixy Misa persona was due to brainwashing when in fact.
 * The Prince of Tennis' got a good one. Seigaku's Takashi "Taka" Kawamura is a kind hearted guy whose father owns a sushi restaurant, but whenever he grabs a racket, his "burning" mode is turned on and becomes Seigaku's top power player.
 * Yamamoto Jun from Special A turns from a relatively shy guy to a cassanova whenever he is kissed by a girl. Later on it seems to be when a certain girl just looks at him.
 * Zetsu from Naruto has two well-differenced halves. His right side is black and speaks in a deep voice, while his left side is white and talks in a lighter voice. Both halves can talk with each other, and sometimes argue! Later, we see that he can even literally split his personalities (and body) into two different halves.
 * Another example is Jugo, whose powers cause the split personality but activate independently, and as such, the change between the two has nothing to do with whether or not he uses his powers.
 * On Dragon Ball, the character Lunch (or Launch, depending on the translation) would go from a sweet, naive, blue-haired (or black-haired in the manga) girl to a hot-tempered, gunslinging, criminally-inclined blonde (dubbed "Kushami", Japanese for "sneeze", by fans) and back again whenever she sneezed.
 * Lady Une of Gundam Wing developed split personalities out of her love for her boss Treize, one a cold-hearted, calculating Colonel Badass, the other a kind, soft-spoken peace advocate. She has a few moments of near breakdown before being shot roughly halfway through the series and remaining comatose until the final arc. The coma apparently gives her time to resolve her issues, and when she wakes up she has Iron Une's military and strategic skills and Saint Une's compassion and desire for peace.
 * Her glasses act as a trigger. Once she puts them on, you're guaranteed to see her order somebody's death.
 * The "Other Momoka" from Keroro Gunsou, as well as Private Tamama. Both appear sweet and harmless at first, but they hide an extremely jealous and possessive side that occasionally comes out when a perceived "rival" for the object of their affection appears.
 * Parodied in an episode of Excel Saga, in which a cute detective channels her late father whenever she puts on his hat.
 * At the end of the series, its played straight when Il Palazzo shows another kind of split personality, becoming possessed by his own desire to conquer. This was a definite case of a Super-Powered Evil Side, along with elements of demonic possession. In the manga, of course, which had more time for these things, the split personality is more of a subversion, the only real differences being the fashion sense and preferred targets - neither are evil or good, and both are slightly insane.
 * It's still a bit unclear how Lord Il Palazzo's personalities work in the manga. Sometimes it seems that it's only a case of varying amnesia, vaguely remembering and forgetting things from his past, which shape his motives. But one consistent difference has been that sometimes he is fond of Excel and tries to get her to remember something (maybe), while other times he wants her gone. It's also unclear which personality, his caring or uncaring one, is his true personality.
 * Yami Yugi in Yu-Gi-Oh! is initially presented as one of these, before it is revealed that he is actually the spirit of an ancient Egyptian pharaoh. The same goes for Yami Bakura, but not Yami Marik, who is a more traditional split personality caused by childhood trauma. Ironically, Yugi's GX successor is a true example.
 * Mahoraba's Aoba Kozue has five personalities, switching to one at random whenever she's shocked or surprised. Her eye colors change for each personality, and each personality prefers to wear her hair differently. She switches back to normal by going unconscious. While each personality is pretty distinct from the rest, they all have several distinct traits they share, particularly a liking for her crush and a major thing for umeboshi.
 * Shinobu Sensui in Yu Yu Hakusho was a lawful yet pure and innocent young man before encountering the Black Book Club, rich men who tortured demons for fun. He couldn't bring himself to kill humans (as opposed to demons), and so developed another personality to do the dirty work. Over the years, he developed six alternate personalities, switching between them depending on the situation (I.e: ). Each one has a different level of power; the original one, Shinobu, is the most powerful of them all... and is still an innocent, as he let the others do the dirty work.
 * In the manga Othello, the shy main character Yaya switches to her alter ego, bold and assertive Nana, when she sees her reflection.
 * In Cardcaptor Sakura,  turns out to be the "disguise" of  .   He later comes to realize what goes on.
 * A particularly odd case takes place in Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei, where Kaere Kimura has a split personality that contains an aggressive, lawsuit-happy Foreign Fanservice persona and an over-the-top Yamato Nadeshiko persona.
 * Another strange example is Sukisho in which
 * Mobile Suit Gundam 00: Allelujah Haptism has a rather psychotic other half that he calls Hallelujah.
 * has this as well..
 * Actually, it's the other way round:
 * Air Gear: The perky, happy Akito has another personality, the violent and curse-spewing Agito, who was created after his older brother locked him in a cage and forced him into fighting against other AT users. Who's in charge can usually be indicated by his Eyepatch of Power (Agito's is over the left eye, and Akito's is on the right).
 * MPD Psycho really drives this trope to utter extremes. Hell, some of the multiple personalities even . Which might make this manga a slight twist.
 * It's amazing what the average corporation can do while trying to
 * Tyki Mikk of D Gray Man has commented how having a light side and a dark side makes life more fun. He can be a perfectly ordinary, personable man, but is also a tremendous sadist and has killed at least five Exorcists, including one of the Generals. Most of the other Noah have similar Split Personalities, albeit somewhat less extreme.
 * Yumie Takagi, berserker soldier of the Iscariot Organization in Hellsing. The (not canon for the series) Cross Fire stories in the first three manga volumes involve her being brought out for various assassinations, to the dismay of her other personality, a thoroughly sweet nun named Yumiko.
 * Jamie Hemeros in Zoids New Century Zero develops a cocky ace pilot alter-ego named Wild Eagle who takes control during battles every now and then. Although popular opinion seems to suggest that this happens when Jamie breaks the sound barrier in his Zoid, Wild Eagle actually seems to appear only when Jamie gets overly stressed out in battle.
 * Wild Eagle might have been passed on from his father.
 * In the second season of Princess Tutu, starts to complain of "another me" being inside of him, . Later, it's revealed that it's actually.
 * Inuyasha has Suikotsu of the Band of Seven, who has three personalities: a kind and caring doctor who has no awareness of the other two (and is the original one), an ultra-violent killing machine who knows of the other two and despises his gentler personality, and an "in-between" personality who is aware of the others and serves the Band of Seven while remaining calmer and more rational than his bloodlusting counterpart.
 * Motoko in Change 123 has three split personalities named Hibiki, Fujiko, and Mikiri - collectively known as HiFuMi (1, 2, 3) - that materialize whenever she's in danger. These split personalities come from her Training from Hell under three different adoptive fathers. Changes in hairstyle, muscle structure and cup size come with it, along with martial arts styles—each personality, other than Motoko, are martial arts masters in a single specific field.
 * Suzuho in Macademi Wasshoi is usually quiet and meek, communicating only through sketchbook messages. When she removes her ribbon, her other side comes out, which is pretty much the exact opposite in personality. Violent, talkative, and, for some reason, blue-haired.
 * Paranoia Agent has a woman whose split personality (who is far more promiscuous and thrill-seeking) actually leaves messages for her on her answering machine. And threats. Frightening stuff.
 * This is actually a moment where MPD is depicted accurately. There have been recorded cases of personalities threatening other personalities. (Even going as far as causing bodily damage)
 * Another example from a work by Satoshi Kon is  of Paprika, who is the dream avatar of
 * It gets better:  has characteristics of both , hinting at the former's affections for the latter.
 * The Big Bad in Part 5 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure has two personalities. There's Doppio, a borderline autistic, childlike man, and Diavolo, a cunning, violent and paranoid mafia boss. His hair color, eyes, and size change drastically and his Stand power changes form as well. Doppio communicates with Diavolo by holding random objects to his face like a phone (after hearing schizophrenic ringing).
 * One Piece:
 * Usopp may be developing this. When it was first introduced, "Sogeking" was an assumed name and Paper-Thin Disguise Usopp used (the reasons are complicated). Usopp acted rather differently while in his Sogeking disguise, even managing to score his first real Big Damn Heroes moment before reverting back to his old, cowardly self after circumstances changed and he was able to remove the mask. During a later fight (as Usopp), he is actually depicted mentally arguing with Sogeking. Later still:
 * The Big Bad in Part 5 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure has two personalities. There's Doppio, a borderline autistic, childlike man, and Diavolo, a cunning, violent and paranoid mafia boss. His hair color, eyes, and size change drastically and his Stand power changes form as well. Doppio communicates with Diavolo by holding random objects to his face like a phone (after hearing schizophrenic ringing).
 * One Piece:
 * Usopp may be developing this. When it was first introduced, "Sogeking" was an assumed name and Paper-Thin Disguise Usopp used (the reasons are complicated). Usopp acted rather differently while in his Sogeking disguise, even managing to score his first real Big Damn Heroes moment before reverting back to his old, cowardly self after circumstances changed and he was able to remove the mask. During a later fight (as Usopp), he is actually depicted mentally arguing with Sogeking. Later still:


 * It has been noted by fans that the villainous Marshall D. Teach, aka Blackbeard, seems to have three separate personalities. One of them is the cowardly fool in his first appearance, who seems more concerned with cherry pie than anything else, unable to plan ahead or do anything competently; the second is the sadistic monster and No-Nonsense Nemesis who, who is overly ambitious and often overconfident; the third being the genius strategist that keeps the other two from getting killed. Some fans reject this and propose that Blackbeard might be three separate people entirely (siblings, maybe), who share the same body. This might make a lot of sense, possibly explaining why he doesn't seem to require sleep and the reason some characters have referred to Teach as “them” rather than “he”.

"Shiki: "There's nothing funny about having a dual personality." Tohko: "No, no. You know, you two don't have anything as pleasing to look at as dissociative identity disorder. Existing simultaneously, each having their own unique will, and on top of that your actions are coordinated. That sort of complex personality shouldn't be called a "dissociated identity," but rather a "united independent personality.""
 * Averted in Kara no Kyoukai:: Tohko correctly identifies that what Shiki can't be dissociative identity disorder, given it's complexity.


 * Inner Moka from Rosario + Vampire is an example of this. Moka's Rosario acts as a barrier, once removed Inner Moka comes out to kick ass.
 * Nobara Ibaragi in Gakuen Alice has some sort of split personality - one personality adores and wants to protect Mikan, and the other does whatever her evil 'teacher' tells her to do.
 * from Fullmetal Alchemist is revealed to suffer a sui generis, mindblowingly over the top case of this. Long story short: . He has devoted most of his life to isolate, communicate with and befriend each of these.
 * In Monster, Johan is indeed a real person, but Inspector Lunge (or Runge) is convinced that he is an alternate personality of Dr. Tenma.
 * Wolfgang Grimmer, meanwhile, occasionally blacks out when physically threatened. When he recovers, everyone who threatened him is dead. He refers to the personality that takes over as "the Magnificent Steiner", after a show he watched as a child (where the title character is the superhero persona of an unknowing boy).
 * In Karneval,
 * In King of Thorn, the English translation says Alice has schizophrenia, but it later becomes clear that it's actually DID - being abused by her family caused her to develop an alternate personality called Laloo, who would take the abuse for her. After she became infected with Medusa, Laloo manifested as an Enemy Without.
 * There are two characters in Zettai Karen Children who suffer from split personalities: Sera (due to possession) and Phantom Daughter AKA Mirage AKA, Feather.
 * This becomes the premise of Nanaka 6/17, once the title character's original personality re-emerges in early story, after a Laser-Guided Amnesia period in which she reversed to her 6-years old mindset. And in the manga only,.
 * Lain, the main character of Serial Experiments Lain, seems to have several as the series progresses: shy, schoolgirl Lain, a very famous "Lain of the Wired" who's arrogant and powerful, and a manipulative and sadistic Lain. It turns out that.
 * In the Hentai manga series Bondage Fairies, the fourth manga - Extreme - introduces Urushira, an old flame of Pamila's. By day, she's a sweet and caring doctor.
 * In Mahou Sensei Negima, as of Chapter 284,
 * Luna, too.
 * Black Lagoon's favorite Creepy Twins, Hansel and Gretel, crank their typical Nightmare Fuel on this trope and share split personalities with each other. They could decide themselves who wanted to be Hansel and who wanted to be Gretel at the time, to the point that there is Wild Mass Guessing as to which one was actually which at any given point during their story arc.
 * Count Cain reveals in its Wham! Episode that
 * Many readers suspect that this was partly The Tower being duped like he was over the zombie thing, and that while 'the original' wasn't the greatest guy he was a more normal human being than either of his halves.  Or, you know, loyalty made him a real boy. That also works.
 * The Wild Mass Guessing above is slightly more realistic and has canon basis, but is definitely not confirmed. And given the character in question is dead all along anyway...
 * From Fruits Basket we have Hatsuharu, the ox of the zodiac, who turns into 'Black Haru'. Black Haru usually comes out when he's angry and while Haru is usually easy to get along with, no one can handle his other side.
 * There's also a milder version in Kagura, the boar, who is sweet and mostly caring but becomes possessive and quite occasionally violent when Kyo is around. Either Tsundere to the extreme or possibly a bit Yandere.
 * Both could be considered oddly realistic takes, as well. Neither are shown to be aware of the changes, except from what others tell them (Kagura is even confused about why Kyo looked so beaten after one incident), and we've seen just what caused them to develop and triggers the changes. Haru's "Black Haru" personality developed as a result of verbal abuse and his overwhelming resentment of Yuki, and he only changes when angry (harder to achieve than it sounds). Kagura, on the other hand, switches when something threatens to expose that.
 * Gemini Saga, from Saint Seiya. The specifics are never made terribly clear (i.e we don't know exactly how it developed and came to exist), but basically it takes hold of him and causes him to
 * Irabu-sensei from Kuuchu Buranko has a total of three personalities: Stuffed Animal one, who acts silly and childish, Child one, who acts more serious and snarky, and Adult one, who is something inbetween but leans closer to Animal one.
 * Lisianthus of SHUFFLE! absorbed the soul of her unborn sister while still in the womb. The two take turns being the dominant personality. In the original visual novel she has no name but is known as Reverse Sia. Giving her the name Kikyo becomes a plot point.
 * Angel Sanctuary: An interesting subversion with Alexiel and Setsuna. Setsuna is (currently) the dominant persona while Alexiel steps occasionally as his Superpowered Badass Side whenever he's in over his head. Although each has a completely different character, Setsuna still occasionally echoes some of Alexiel's words and personality, proving that they really are the same person deep down.
 * What about mild-mannered Negishi from Detroit Metal City, whose alternate personality Johannes Krauser II is the badass and feared leater of a Death Metal band?

Comic Books

 * Two-Face, of Batman fame, alternates between the just Harvey Dent and the maniacal Two-Face.
 * Despite being the most well known example, he is also an abnormal one, because as Two-Face, both of his personas, good and evil, are "on" at the same time (Usually. Two-Face is a huge case of Depending on the Writer). Coincidentally, his symptoms sometimes imply actual Schizophrenia, which doesn't exactly help clear the confusion people have about the two conditions.
 * A few comics have suggested that The Joker has multiple personality disorder, switching from harmless prankster to Complete Monster and everything inbetween.
 * Even Batman himself has been accused of this. By day, he's Bruce Wayne. Put on the costume, and he's a completely different person. It's even been argued that the Batman persona is his "true" personality, and Bruce Wayne is the mask he hides behind.
 * Then there are those that argues that there are three personae: Bruce Wayne, the Rich Idiot With No Day Job, The Dark Knight, the avenger who Is The Night, the shadow who shows up to beat the guilty into a pulp and who has no personal ties; and Batman, the person who briefly shows up in-between, the guy who loves Alfred as a father and who consider Dick Grayson to be his son.
 * Sane people tend to agree that the real person is Batman, and that the other two personae are exaggerations of the original. Though this usually is just about who he is pretending to be, not about whether any of them are independant personalities.
 * Some people prefer to call in-between-guy 'Bruce,' labeling the Upper Class Twit 'Brucie' or 'Bruce Wayne,' and seeing 'Batman' as being also largely made up of masks, since 'Batman' can never show weakness of any kind, ever. And the people who know him best usually do call him Bruce in private or emotional moments.
 * Grant Morrison's run on Batman revealed that Batman, who prepares for everything, deliberately cultivated a back-up personality should the Bruce Wayne/Batman persona be incapacitated.
 * Arnold Wesker is a rather odd example. He's a mild-mannered ventriloquist, and is utterly convinced that his psychopathic mobster alter ego, Scarface is a product of the ventriloquist's dummy it manifests through, rather than his own brain, a fact Scarface tends to agree with. The association of the split personality with the puppet is so strong that the personality doesn't manifest outright when the puppet is missing or destroyed, although poor Arnold then feels a compulsion to repair it.
 * Some stories imply that Wesker is correct, and the doll really is possessed by an evil spirit or spirits (in his last appearance, Wesker dies and the doll is burned...and gets up and walks before collapsing). And a couple suggest that Wesker is just acting and the doll is really just a ruse to convince everyone he is crazy. Much like The Joker is sometimes accused of being, but given some of the stuff Scarface has put him through, Wesker would arguably be even worse.
 * Dr. Bruce Banner in Incredible Hulk was a different person when transformed into the Hulk. The comics took it to extremes, with different versions of the Hulk with different personalities: in addition to the traditional "Savage Hulk", there also developed a sneaky, amoral version called Joe Fixit (who was grey, like in the Hulk's first appearance). Eventually, the personalities were integrated into the "Merged Hulk", but this was retconned to be just another personality, the Professor (who had Banner's brainpower, Fixit's cunning, and most of Savage Hulk's strength).
 * Two other personalities in Bruce's lineup are the Devil Hulk, a reptilian creature that lacks any sense of guilt, and the Green Scar, who combines Fixit's cunning with the Savage's strength, and over time develops to become possibly the strongest Hulk incarnation of all.
 * The Hulk's son Skaar also has a split personality; "normal" Skaar is a Conan-style barbarian, while "puny" Skaar is an adolescent boy who hates his other self for his savage deeds.
 * Spider-Man examples:
 * The Green Goblin, who sometimes suffers from this, though in an inversion the real persona Norman Osborn can be just as evil as his Super-Powered Evil Side. And of course The Lizard, who is basically Bruce Banner-lite.
 * Doctor Octopus sometimes showed signs of this in his career. There were times when his original, timid, benevolent personality of Otto Octavius would resurface, but his evil Doctor Octopus persona would always return. In the movie Spider-Man 2 this Trope seemed to apply even more.)
 * Grant Morrison's run on Doom Patrol featured, among other characters, Kay Challis, also known as Crazy Jane, who had no less than sixty-four separate personalities, each with its own name and function, and after a "gene-bomb" was detonated during an alien invasion of Earth, each with its own superhuman ability.
 * Triplicate Girl/Triad from the Legion of Super-Heroes tends to show signs of this trope when she splits apart. The version of her in the Post-Zero Hour Hour reboot was explicitly written as having three distinct personalities when split—which was considered a mental illness on her homeworld, although her grandmother insisted it was natural, and suppressing the different aspects was what was unhealthy.
 * Then again, arguing with yourself is considered pretty nutty on this planet, too.
 * The current version takes this a little far; her entire civilisation consists of triplicates of the same person. The one/three who are members of the Legion, however, have had so many different experiences from the others that the rest won't let them rejoin.
 * The DC Comics character Etrigan the Demon was bonded to a man named Jason Blood as punishment for being tempted by Morgaine Le Fay into betraying Camelot. Jason switches places and lets Etrigan take over when there's superheroing to be done. (He's a prime example of Cursed with Awesome.)
 * The DCU also has had two different Rose and Thorn characters over the years, one whose Thorn persona was a villain, and a later one whose Thorn is a hero.
 * There is a Star Wars comic, where after a Jedi kills a love in a fit of jealousy she develops a dissociative disorder. One personality is a crazed killer, murdering women that remind her of the one her love was cheating on her with, while the normal personality obsessively "chases" this killer.
 * Jeanne-Marie Beaubier, aka Aurora of the Marvel Universe's Alpha Flight, had at least two separate personalities when first introduced: the demure and timid "Jeanne-Marie" and the forthright and fun-loving "Aurora". Flashbacks in an early issue of Alpha Flight revealed that the "Aurora" personality split off from "Jeanne-Marie" after she was severely beaten by the nuns who were raising her. Originally, only "Aurora" had superpowers (not surprisingly, since the nuns had beaten Jeanne-Marie for telling them she could fly -- she could, but they assumed she was lying), and if too much stress caused her to revert to the "Jeanne-Marie" personality in a crisis, it could cause serious problems. In her more recent appearances, she's shown signs of having a third, unnamed, personality, whose main characteristic is being psychopathically violent.
 * Similar to Crazy Jane, Professor X's son Legion originally possessed three personalities with a distinct psychic power (one was telekinetic, one was telepathic, one was pyrokinetic). This was later expanded to an unnamed number of personalities ALL with a unique power. Unfortunately, when these personalities were successfully merged, the new, improved Legion decided the best thing to do was to travel back in time to kill Magneto (he missed, killing his own father and unintentionally spawning the Age of Apocalypse timeline).
 * Mary Walker, a supervillainess most commonly associated with Daredevil, has three distinct personalities. The "Mary" personality is a timid, quiet, pacifist; her "Typhoid Mary" persona is adventurous, lustful and violent; her "Bloody Mary" personality is sadistic, brutal, and hates all men.
 * Insane robot and Avengers villain Ultron. Every model has a new, different personality, culminating in one version which contained every previous personality constantly vying for supremacy, basically making him eight unstable megalomaniacs in one.
 * Ultron gets it honest, apparently, as his/her creator and 'father' figure, Dr. Henry Pym, underwent a period of insanity where he not only believed himself to be an entirely different person, but claimed to have actually killed Pym. While this was eventually resolved, he's still not the most stable of people,
 * Another from the Avengers; The Sentry and Void. The Sentry is 'The Golden Guardian of Good', blonde haired, handsome and heroic, his powers being strongest during the day. Basically a fangirl's dream version of Legolas, wielding more power than Silver Age Superman with added psychological problems, and a broader power set to boot, which is officially unlimited, facing down beings like Galactus and Green Scar (the latter when extremely agoraphobic) and winning or drawing. The Void is a pure evil, manipulative Eldritch Abomination in semi human form, strongest at night or in the Negative Zone, and is often described as akin to the Angel of Death. Both wield planet busting power, and are immortal effectively by choice. Whenever the Void turns up or The Sentry looks like he's about to lose it, it's a Mass "Oh Crap" moment for the entire Marvel Universe.
 * Shasti from Adam Warren's version of the Dirty Pair is an Artificial Human deliberately engineered with four personalities for different tasks.
 * Copycat from DV8, whose four personalities are each represented by different fonts and word balloons. Ivana actually points out the Hollywood Psych at work, saying that Gem's condition doesn't resemble any case of Dissociative Identity Disorder she's ever read about. She theorizes it has something to do with her Gen-Factor mutating an existing psychological disorder.
 * There's one story by German comic writer Walter Moers with a "schizophrenic" guy who says that he "counts for two" because of his two personalities, of which he is aware, and who switch pretty fast. One of them is pretty boring and essentially just says things like "me too". Yes, it's neither correct nor PC.
 * Jack Ryder sometimes sees The Creeper as a completely different personality.
 * Peter Milligan's reboot of Shade the Changing Man has this in droves, with Shade, his heart, his suit, his skin, his alter-ego Hades, and others all forming, taking control, leaving, and even rejoining the hero.
 * Black Widow suffers from this temporarily in one Marvel Team-Up story. The three-parter starts with Spider-Man noticing her being assaulted by thugs; he swings down to help out, only to find that his old ally has no idea who “Black Widow” or “Natasha Romanova” is, insisting she’s a school teacher named Nancy Rushman. After several issues fighting Hydra operatives with help from Nick Fury and Shang-Chi, Natasha recovers her memory and how it happened.
 * Rose and Thorn was a villain fought by The Flash (as in, Alan Scott) in The Golden Age. Originally an Imaginary Friend of a woman named Rose Canton (the type who a naughty child would blame her misbehavior on) Thorn somehow became a second personality with the ability to control plants. She seemed to be cured eventually - falling in love with Scott and marrying him - but would relapse and oppose the Flash many times, her career ending tragically when Rose killed herself to protect her children from Thorn.
 * A later version of Rose and Thorn (debuting in the Silver Age was like a heroic version of Typhoid Mary. Originally, Rhosyn "Rose" Forrest was a shy, timid, dependent girl until her father's murder at the hands of a criminal gang called The 100, her anguish and stress creating a second personality to emerge. As Thorn, Forrest is a violent and aggressive anti-hero who strives to both avenge her father and protect her vulnerable "sister" Rose.
 * Moon Knight. Unlike most super-heroes, Marc Specter uses two secret identities, millionaire Steven Grant (his social facade, used to deal with the upper class) and cab driver Jake Lockley (his means of gathering info from citizens and criminals). While this has benefitted him quite a lot, the strain of maintaining three identities eventually caused him to snap, the three identities becoming seperate parts of his psyche.

Fan Works

 * This AU Kingdom Hearts fanfic portrays Sora, Roxas, and Naminé as three sides of the same coin, with Sora as the "original". The summary splits them even further, which is confusing. So far the story revolves around Naminé's relationship with her Love Interest, Marluxia, and him trying to get used to Sora and Roxas.
 * from Kira Is Justice.
 * North Korea OC characters in Axis Powers Hetalia fandom tend to be either this or the Evil Twin of the canonical South Korea.
 * Pinkie Pie in Pony POV Series had several created by her refusal to accept certain parts of her. Pinkie Pie (the "normal" personality), Pinkamena (the personality she created to take any sad or unpleasent things she doesn't want to feel), Diane (the part of her who loves her biological parents and her home), and Pinky (her childhood memories). The truama Discord put her through resulted in the birth of Angry Pie (an Ax Crazy psychopath representing her repressed anger) that tried to eat her other personalities..
 * Somewhat subverted with Fluttershy and Fluttercruel. Fluttercruel is her own individual being with her own soul, they're just Sharing a Body..
 * Ponies Make War: After Twilight Sparkle is freed from the Sliver of Darkness, the trauma of everything that's happened causes her mind to split in two—the Actual Pacifist Sparkle (the dominant mind) and the more brutish Twilight (who talks to her, but has no control over their body). This lasts until.
 * The metahuman known as "Skitz" from Douglas Sangnoir's home timeline in Drunkard's Walk. He's a serial reincarnator first born in the Stone Age, who gains both a new power and access to all his previous powers whenever his current incarnation reaches age 21.  The drawback is that the minds/personalities of all his previous incarnations who got that far "wake up" when he does, leaving him a massive case of Split Personality.  Fortunately(?), the child mortality rate for most of the last ten thousand years or so means he's reached 21 "only" about a dozen or so times, and most of them were in the last couple centuries.
 * In Ozzallos' Heir to the Empire, something like this starts affecting Ranma after Serenity's memories start returning. Ranma isn't really two different people, but he seems to develop two different "overlays" to his personality -- the crude martial artist, and the galactic empress with a millennium's life experience -- that he swaps between seamlessly as needed.
 * Asuka Soryuu in the Neon Genesis Evangelion fic Nobody Dies, as a result of neglect and outright abuse by her mother.   While her primary alternate manifests through her doll (and is in fact called "Dollie"), she has many others, all of whom formed to protect and support her.

Film

 * Used in Psycho.
 * , the real killer in the remake of My Bloody Valentine.
 * , the killer in the original My Bloody Valentine.
 * Another well-known example is Gollum and Smeagol ("Stinker" and "Slinker") from Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. In the live-action movies, the two personalities frequently carry on conversations, to the point that they're practically two minds consciously coexisting simultaneously in the same head. This split-personality theme is less pronounced in the earlier animated movies or the original books, but still present. See entry under Gollum Made Me Do It.
 * In the movie Primal Fear, the shy and gentle Aaron, on trial for killing the archbishop, is revealed to have a split personality named Roy who is much more outspoken and aggressive and did in fact kill the clergyman. At the end, we also find out that
 * Fight Club
 * The Machinist, which is sort of a deconstruction of both Fight Club and Crime and Punishment, explores the psychological side of this and the kind of trauma that can cause it.
 * The premise of the Farrelly Brothers' movie Me Myself and Irene.
 * Yet another example where it is incorrectly labeled as schizophrenia.
 * Sybil, based on a 'true story' of Shirley Ardell Mason.
 * of the movie Identity.
 * In Adaptation, Donald Kaufman writes a script titled The Three, in which the serial killer, the cop chasing him, and the victim the cop falls in love with are all the same person. His brother Charlie points out how idiotic and filled with Fridge Logic the film is.
 * The Three Faces of Eve had this as the entire plot.
 * Pamela Voorhees in Friday the 13 th - "Kill her mommy! KILL HER!"
 * In the movie Peacock, the painfully shy John (Cillian Murphy) has more confidant personality named Emma who makes him breakfast and lays out his clothes every day, like a wife would—which is precisely what everyone thinks she is when she is accidentally discovered. The personalities are aware of one another, but they have no memory of the other's experiences. John gets increasingly panicked as Emma begins to 'control' him more, and
 * The basis of Chris Falkowski's short film, Head.
 * Surprisingly averted with Two-Face in The Dark Knight Saga. Several other diagnoses can surely be made. For one, he still can't make simple moral decisions without his coin and acts... should we say, chaotically.
 * Doesn't seem so much that he can't, just that he chooses not to. He only uses it when deciding the fates of the people he holds responsible for everything that happened to him in the last day or so. He's really just on a revenge spree, using the coin to illustrate the arbritariness of it all.
 * Black Swan clearly is meant to make the viewer think this is going on, but it ultimately leaves it ambiguous as to whether  the case could be made either way.
 * In Psycho Beach Party you learn very early on that Chicklet has at least two other personalities.
 * Carter in Raising Cain has several, including the amoral Cain and his "fall guy" Josh.
 * Jamie/IS from the Disney Channel movie Read it and Weep. The two of them are fully aware of each other, and even converse regularly.

Literature

 * In the classic Robert Louis Stevenson novel The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dr. Henry Jekyll develops a formula that separates his good and evil personalities. By drinking the potion he can transform himself into the villainous Edward Hyde, making this trope Older Than Radio.
 * Or rather, this is how pop culture depicts it. In the original novel, Jekyll and Hyde were not separate personalities at all, the Mr. Hyde persona simply used in order for Jekyll to indulge in "shameful activities" that he never described but which he could not do in his more respectable identity. The formula did cause a psychological change - making him feel "more liberated" and unable to feel guilt or remorse for evil acts - but Jekyll was always in direct control of his actions as Hyde, making this an Aversion. However, most modern adaptations play the Trope straight.
 * Happens to some of the Clayborn in David Wingrove's Chung Kuo series when under severe pressure.
 * Mark Meadows, AKA "Captain Trips," of the Wild Cards series would seem to qualify here. Normally a smiling, weirdly dressed and rather ineffectual hippy (albeit one with great skills in biochemistry), in time of need his various powders and potions are capable of making him an ace of badass proportions .... or rather, several aces, depending on which one he takes. All of them have a different mind and personality, and most of them think the good Captain is a wimp or worse, and do everything they can to keep from reverting when the chemical wears off.
 * The protagonist of Simon Hawke's "Tribe of One" trilogy (set in the Dark Sun setting of Dungeons & Dragons) is a man with more personalities than he can count, who walks Athas in search of a way to bring his fractured mind together.
 * In The Lord of the Rings and related materials, it is suggested that Gollum's personality developed from Smeagol talking to the Ring ("my precious") which he eventually identified as part of himself.
 * Subverted to hell and gone in the novel Blindsight: one of the characters is a linguist with three surgically-induced alter personalities (known collectively as the Gang of Four). Some time is taken up in discussion of twentieth-century attitudes towards MPD, which are largely dismissed as barbaric and irrational.
 * The Gang are a relatively realistic depiction of D.I.D cases where all of the personalities know of the others' existence and cooperate.
 * Altogether Andrews, from Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, has eight personalities, none of which answer to Andrews. There's also Agnes Nitt and her alter ego Perdita X. Dream, which started out as a name she thought was cool in Lords and Ladies, then became the embodiment of her id in Maskerade, then became a full-on Split Personality in Carpe Jugulum.
 * This is apparently not that uncommon on the Discworld. Perdita is explained as having come about specifically because Agnes took a part of herself-her desire to not be a nice girl with a good personality-and gave it a name. Her senior witches muse to themselves that giving something a name gives it life, too. Rincewind's conscience and Sam Vimes's inner rage are also sometimes depicted as semi-sentient, especially in Night Watch, where Vimes refers to it as "The Beast". In Thud!, we find Vimes also has an "inner watchman", who
 * Mightily Oates also suffers from this, dividing into a skeptic part and a devout part. At one point he considered having himself exorcized. And, like Agnes/Perdita, he is resistant to vampiric mind control, because they can control only one mind per brain.
 * Thud!! also features Pointer and Pickles, the owners of a rock collector's shop, who turn out to be the split personalities of the same woman.
 * Lord Mark Vorkosigan, from Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga, developed four extra personalities to resist torture: Gorge, Grunt, Howl and Killer. While he learns to control them, they explicitly do not go away. Fortunately they are all fixated of protecting/aiding Mark to the best of their abilities from the getgo and even like his girlfriend.
 * Mark's brother/progenitor Miles hovers upon the verge of this trope when is undercover identity of Admiral Naismith threatens to become a fully separate persona. Mark also laments that at least Mile's alter ego is the sort of person you can dress up and take out to a party if the need arises compared to his far more primal alters.
 * Ted Dekker's thriller novel Thr3e (as well as The Movie of the Book) contains an example of this trope:
 * Sybil
 * Sidney Sheldon's novel Tell Me Your Dreams is about a woman who fears she is being stalked, and her two co-workers who become concerned about her. It is eventually revealed that all three are the same person; the main character developed two separate personalities because she could not handle the trauma of.
 * In Stephen King's The Dark Tower series introduces two characters in the second book: Odetta Holmes, a fairly well-to-do black woman who lost her legs and is generally surviving the 1960's as best she can; and Detta Walker, who is dangerous, brutal, and very bitter. The two personalities are almost completely unaware of each other, at least until the plot comes knocking. . Odetta/Dedda is irritatingly referred to by all characters and narration as "schizophrenic."
 * in The Last Sherlock Holmes Story (yeah, it was a weird book).
 * In Amelia Atwater-Rhodes' Persistence of Memory, Erin suffers from DID with the complication that  Erin's alter, Shevaun, is a very real and very dangerous vampire.
 * In James Swallow's Warhammer 40,000 Red Fury, the Blood Magic gives the Bloodfiends the Genetic Memory of all those whose blood they drank, giving them effective multiple unintegrated personalities—and a fierce desire to drink more blood, worsening the problem. Rafen, fighting one, can clearly recognize the source of its sblood, and Dying as Yourself, it might have said, "Brother."
 * "Runt" from Wraith Squadron manages to skirt the reality issue by being, well, an alien - he has a number of highly specialized minds, such as the Pilot and the Student; this is noted to be natural and healthy for his species, and learning to switch quickly between personalities is helpful for him. Lara Notsil/Gara Petothel/Kirney Slane, though she might appear to fit the trope and once dreamed of her different personae arguing, is really a spy who started Becoming the Mask and soon had a genuine desire to defect, as well as some unstable identity issues. No split personality.
 * This is only the start of the trouble in Michael Slade's.
 * Matt Ruff's novel Set This House in Order is about Andrew Gage, the "public face" of a multiple personality. And that's just the beginning.
 * The Dragonlords are born with two souls/identities: one human and one dragon. This overlaps into Sharing a Body in that the two personalities are fully aware of each other and even converse at times. The main character, Linden, has trouble controlling the anger issues of his dragon side, Rathan. His mate's infant-like dragon side refuses to acknowledge her.
 * of Fight Club. About two-thirds through the book, the reader
 * Severian in The Book of the New Sun who is both the original torturer Severian and also Chatelaine Thecla after eating the Albazo (and Thecla.)
 * Janis Cordelia Plumtree in Earthquake Weather by Tim Powers, whose condition is complicated by the fact that.
 * In Jack Vance's The Book of Dreams, Howard Alan Treesong, the last Demon Prince, has five separate personalities.
 * Ellen Hopkins'  has a more realistic case of this. Near the end it is revealed that
 * In Artemis Fowl, gets one because of.
 * Done in a fairly realistic way in Matt Ruff's Set This House In Order with two characters who both have DID. Both suffered severe abuse as children, but one has been aware of this problem for a long time, and all the personalities work together and see a psychiatrist. The other character is younger and less aware of what is going on, and is afraid because she keeps having periods of memory loss. Both characters eventually work towards the goals of overcoming abuse, getting treatment, and choosing between full integration and trying to function by having all personalities cooperate with each other.
 * In the two part Fear Street story Fear Hall, it turns out that
 * from The Wheel of Time fit this trope as well as anything else. It's difficult to determine if it's caused by madness from use of the One Power or being a reincarnation of the original and the voice is actually a real being. In any way  certainly thinks he's suffering from madness. At the end of the 12th book,.
 * The series also includes a couple of weird borderline examples with the recurring villains Padan Fain and Slayer. Fain merged imperfectly with the soul of the Evil Chancellor Mordeth, and though he thinks of himself as one personality he has two distinct sets of mannerisms which he'll switch between randomly and apparently unwittingly, and sometimes he'll forget which of the two names he's currently using. Slayer is actually two distinct men named Luc and Isam who share a body; they were combined into one by the Dark One but retain discrete identities to the point that when which personality is dominant changes, the body also changes to reflect it.
 * In the New Jedi Order series, teen Jedi Tahiri has this after a Shaper's attempt to transform her into a Force-using Yuuzhan Vong fails- Tahiri retains her original personality, but the Vong personality can't be excised and remains in her subconscious. Ultimately, Riina (Tahiri's Vong half) tries to pull a Split Personality Takeover, but when she and human Tahiri prove too connected for this to work out, a Split Personality Merge happens instead. The resulting person calls herself Tahiri, but has the memories and experiences of both.
 * The Minds of Billy Milligan is the true story of a man with multiple personalities.
 * The Fifth Sally
 * In one Animorphs novel, The Separation, Rachel's personality goes so far as to be split into two physically different people—one timid, gentle, and pacifistic; the other ruthless, violent, and obsessive—when she gets cut in half while in starfish morph. Because of starfishes' regenerative powers, she "grows back" a whole extra person.
 * Joe Ledger Has a committee in his head, The Civilian Who keeps him sane but is unable to deal with his day job, The Warrior Who just wants to hurt someone and the Cop who combines the best of Both being honorable but still a fighter.
 * In Michael Flynn's Up Jim River, Donovan. His multiple personalities were induced deliberately, but the manner was bungled—also, perhaps, deliberately.
 * Sefalet's right and left-hand mouths in A Dirge for Prester John.

Live Action TV

 * In the Night Visions episode Switch, the protagonist, Sydney, has multiple personalities.
 * Dollhouse has two:
 * Niki Sanders on Heroes has "Jessica", the personality of her dead sister, as an amoral alter ego with super-strength. This may be Justified Trope by being a superpower rather than a pre-existing condition, but this has yet to be made explicit.
 * They've since clarified that it's neither: some people just can't handle having superpowers and the stress causes a dissociative break.
 * Making this one a quite literal Super-Powered Evil Side.
 * When "Jessica" kills their father in early S1, it's made clear that he was abusive to the point of killing Nikki's sister Jessica, after whom the alter ego is named. Only the "Jessica" alter remembers, which resembles real theories of DID fairly well. In S2, a third, party girl personality, who apparently began as a mere alias, emerges.
 * A patient in Private Practice was alleged to have this condition she was diagnosed at the age of seven and partially raised by her older sister she hasn't had a resurgence in ten years they came back with the stress of her sister moving away.
 * While this is a staple trope of daytime soap operas, the soap One Life to Live took this to an extreme. Not only did established character Victoria Lord Buchanan develop a number of personalities (the most notorious of which was streetwalker Niki Smith, a full contrast to Viki's upper-crust manner), her daughter Jessica later developed her own split (tough girl Tess). Apparently, in the OLTL universe, split personality is a genetic disorder. In addition, Viki's brother, Todd Manning, at one point was also thought to suffer from DID, with 5 separate personalities: the original Todd, Tommy, a little boy who was the abused Todd as a small child, Rodd, an Italian-accented charmer and Peter, a representation of Todd's abusive step-father, and a strict female personality that served as the Gatekeeper. At the end of the storyline, Todd admitted he'd been faking all of the personalities, but as he left town (the actor was leaving the show) a last scene showed Todd and all of his personalities on the plane.
 * Actually, in the case of Jessica/Tess it was a result of a retcon where a young Jessica follows Niki to a bar and gets raped by a guy and this was caught on tape. The result of Bess was Jessica giving birth to a stillborn baby and Bess coming out to protect her by switching the baby with her cousin Starr's baby who was giving birth the same night she did.
 * The United States of Tara, with four alternate personalities: a sex-and-drugs addict 15-year-old called T; a disturbing Stepford Smiler housewife named Alice; and a male, rowdy, alcohol- and brawls-loving motorist called Buck; along with
 * Now there's also
 * In the third season of  Homicide: Life On The Street , a serial killer turns out to have multiple personalities, including
 * Shawn and Gus run into a character with three personalities on Psych.
 * When Gus points out how rare the condition is, it is hand-waved by Shawn pointing out it only has to happen once to be true.
 * On the British soap opera Hollyoaks, troubled emo kid Newt has an alternate personality called "Eli", who trashes the Deans' house and encourages him to run away from his foster home. In recent episodes he now plans to find and kill the real Eli (a friend from his days in the social care system) in the hope of banishing the "Eli" personality.
 * On Ally McBeal, one client was the original personality, who wanted treatment to get rid of the alter-ego, who hired another firm to protect its existence. The court found in favour of the original personality, which the treatment then unexpectedly eliminated. This is a case of Did Not Do the Research, as the treatment for DID is to integrate the personalities together.
 * Baywatch has, by far, the most hilarious example of this. A woman develops a split personality when her twin sister dies. Her two personalities both become obsessed with Mitch Buchannon. One personality takes over and tries to drown him. The real topper is the woman is played by Carrie-Anne Moss years before The Matrix.
 * Nip Tuck one of the episodes is Montana/Sassy/Justice one wants her ankles fixed and another one wants her breasts gone because she is 5, this is the same person mind you.
 * Law and Order Special Victims Unit has had a multiple personality woman (Cynthia Nixon) killing her abusive dad
 * This is the premise of the short-lived series My Own Worst Enemy
 * In The Sarah Connor Chronicles episode "Allison from Palmdale," Cameron suffers a glitch due to combat damage she took earlier in the series. As a result, she takes on a completely different identity and personality, that of a girl named Allison Young, a future resistance fighter whom her body was modeled after  By the end of the episode, she recovers, though not without supplying the stuff of many an unpleasant dream in the process.
 * In one episode of Stargate SG-1, Carter likens being host to a Tok'ra symbiote to having schizophrenia. They meant DID. Apparently, they later did their research, and as though to pay penance for their error, made an episode where Daniel Jackson actually got schizophrenia from an Applied Phlebotinum that was intended to kill Goa'uld.
 * Since DID patients generally aren't aware of their other personalities, but some schizophrenia manifests as hearing voices in your head, maybe they did mean schizophrenia. The Tok'ra host and symbiote are conscious at the same time regardless of who is controlling the body, and communicate with each other mentally.
 * Criminal Minds used this twice: once in second season, when, and once in fourth season, when  . In the first case, all of the personalities were aware of each other, although it's not clear that they knew they inhabited the same body. In the second, only the secondary personality is aware of the condition, which leads to a.
 * The Doctor Who audio Omega has a sort-of case of this:  However, it's clearly not DID and has rather more sci-fi causes.
 * An episode of CSI had a woman faking multiple personalities to get an insanity plea.
 * An episode of Lie to Me has Cal take a client with this disorder. Cal has to figure out which of her several personalities witnessed a murder.
 * Worth noting that although the character is initially referred to as having a split personality, Foster corrects the speaker and instead says that she has DID, which is the term used for the rest of the episode. Foster also notes that DID is very rare, assuming it exists at all.
 * An episode of Forever Knight features a woman with two personalities, one of whom is a normal mortal and the other a vampire.
 * 1960's Batman series. Professor William Omaha McElroy, an Egyptologist at Yale University, would become the villain King Tut every time he was hit on the head and return to normal when he was hit on the head again. He would be the only series villain never sent to jail, via the insanity defense.
 * Prof. Mc Elroy also knew about his Tut self (despite not recalling what he did under ) also tried to prevent King Tut's emergence via wearing a special hat supposed to soften blows to the head. Obviously, it didn't work.
 * This is the premise for the Russian comedy series Zaitsev+1. The protagonist, Sasha Zaitsev (sometimes Latinicized as Zaicev) is a typical college nerd who is in love with Nastya, the prettiest girl in his class, although she doesn't know it and stays with her cheating Jerk Jock boyfriend. Whenever Zaitsev gets hit in the head, is blinded by a bright light, or is deafened by a loud noise, he turns into Fyodor, his wild, rude, and cynical alter ego who likes big women. While Fyodor is actually played by a different actor, only the audience perceives him as a different person. Everyone else just notices that Zaitsev is suddenly acting very differently. Fyodor likes to sleep around, especially with another girl named Nastya, which becomes a problem for Zaitsev, who can't really explain his problem to others without sounding insane.
 * The Season Nine finale of Law and Order: Criminal Intent, "Three In One", has a character who legitimately has three personalities as opposed to faking. The following spoiler will tell you whether any of them did anything illegal.
 * Highlander had an immortal with a split personality. The good side, Michael Moore (no, not THAT one), was a good friend of Duncan's. But the evil side, Quentin Barnes, slowly overpowered Moore and Duncan had to keep his promise to stop Barnes. In an earlier time, the evil side actually killed the good side's girlfriend.
 * Murdoch Mysteries featured a suspect in a murder that suffered from this in the episode 'Me, Myself, and Murdoch'
 * Played for laughs in an episode of Night Court, where a defendant's DID wasn't revealed to the main characters until near the end. One personality was prudish, the other was slutty. The episode's running gag was for her more "open" side luring Dan into some private (and always off-camera) location for some hanky-panky, only for her prudish side to re-emerge just as things were apparently getting good.

Music
"1. The Administrator 2. The Anaesthetizer 3. The Revenger 4. The Protector"
 * Renard, oh lord, Renard. Some of his artists pseudonyms, in rough alphabetical order, are: Adraen, Azrael, Bloomin' Nutters, D-Mode-D, Detergent, Emoticon, Furries in a Blender, Hecate, Jackal Queenston, Jaql, Kitcaliber, Kitsune, Klippa, Lollipop, Mayhem, MGD-Crew, MGD Assault Force, Mr. R, Neko, Plusfuchs, Renard, Perdique Darron, Sigma, and Sonitus Vir, as well as some others.
 * On Maeror Tri's Multiple Personality Disorder, each track corresponds to the function/role each personality tends to assume, based on now-outdated psychological theories about the condition:

""Number 5 just cries a river a minute, 7 wants to tie you up and drown you in it, 14 just wants to say so long, bygones, 32 wants to do things to you that'll make you blush, 10 would key that El Camino that you love so much, And there aren't nobody wants to mess with 23. Yeah, lucky 4 you, tonight I'm just me.""
 * SHeDAISY's song "Lucky 4 You" uses multiple personalities in an almost comedic sense.


 * Cage9's song "My Doppelganger" (a.k.a. "Doble Opuesto") is about a guy who hurts his girlfriend (and possibly other people) via his other half, and apparently doesn't seem to understand it's himself until later in the song.
 * Naoki Maeda has so many aliases, he puts Renard to shame. 180, 190, 190', 200, 270, 290, RevenG, Re-Venge, Black Hole, White Wall, NW260, NM, Omega, Z, ZZ, sonic-coll, Neuras, and so many others. There are at least 50 at last count.
 * During the Acid House movement, it was trendy for musicians to change their alias for every single song. This was probably started by The KLF, who used it for more occultist reasons.

Professional Wrestling

 * Mick Foley had three alters: sadistic Cactus Jack, psychotic Mankind, and Chick Magnet Dude Love.

Tabletop Games

 * Eldar from Warhammer 40,000 cultivate separate personae for wartime and peacetime so that they do not lose themselves to their bloodlust. The dang things are scary when they get pissed...
 * Call of Cthulhu (tabletop game) supplement The Asylum and Other Tales, adventure "The Madman". An investigator is driven insane by exposure to the Cthulhu Mythos and develops an evil alternate personality.
 * The elvish spy Farrow has 15 personalities—each a devout member of a different one of the setting's cutthroat factions.
 * In GURPS a character may be created with multiple personalities. Depending on the "point value" of each personality (they may have different abilities), this can actually count as an advantage! The trigger is a roll against IQ in a "stressful situation"; fail the roll and switch personalities. (If you have more than two, the new one is chosen at random.)

Toys

 * The profile for Zartan (of the G.I. Joe line) on his action figure claims he has this, "to such an extent that his original personality has been buried and forgotten". However, if this was true in the comics or the cartoon, it never came up.

Video Games

 * Sora from Kingdom Hearts has multiple personalities. Sora himself is largely unaware of them, being Locked Out of the Loop to an epic degree, although he can sometimes sense their feelings. The other personalities are dormant and very rarely affect his behavior.
 * This also happened in the Space Ace video game (which later became a short-lived cartoon). After being struck by the bad guy's "Infanto-Ray", Ace would sometimes involuntarily transform into Dexter, a skinny, nerdy, teenage alter-ego.
 * In Final Fantasy VII, the protagonist Cloud suffers from a case of split personality, where
 * One of the villains in Xenogears turns out to be . The villain's name,, offers a vital clue to those with knowledge of psychology. Notably, neither  are the original personality (and the situation only gets more complicated once reincarnation's thrown into the mix).
 * Xenosaga Episode II also has a mini-boss who alternates between two personalities, one of which is cold and cruel, the other of which is hot-blooded and nasty. Oddly enough she doesn't feature in any story sequences and is just a throwaway boss.
 * In Killer7, the player-controlled character actually has seven distinct personalities, with their own looks, special abilities, everything. There's even a personality that's albino, one that's paraplegic, and one that's a woman.
 * In the first versions of killer7 the physical body that everybody else sees is Garcian's. There was either a cutscene or just a part of a level that showed this when Dan walked into a bathroom and saw himself Garcian. This is also alluded to in the released game when confronting Curtis Blackburn when he says "you turned into a badass"
 * in Psychonauts suffers from this due to a battle that shattered his psyche in the past and is only able to remain stable within his underground sanctuary, which houses one of the largest psitanium deposits. His personalities are
 * Also Fred Bonaparte and his split personality Napoleon Bonaparte—Fred knows he's crazy, he just can't seem to get rid of Napoleon until Raz helps him out.
 * Manah, the Creepy Child Big Bad of Drakengard seems at first to be suffering from this. It later turns out to be part-Split Personality, part-Demonic Possession.
 * Slightly subverted in Super Robot Wars Original Generations. After Lamia Loveless had been repaired, her voice box got worse that she sounds like something else that is out of her character, she could sound enthusiastic or just plain cutesy, making it feel like she has different 'modes' of personality. Of course, she quickly reverts back to her calm, cool self afterwards, with much confusion on the events.
 * And played straight in Mugen no Frontier: SRW OG Saga, whereas Lamia Expy Aschen Brodel REALLY has personality split disorder. Just wait until she reveals some skin, and all the stoic android facade gets replaced with a Genki Girl personality.
 * And still in Super Robot Wars, Split Personality is the gimmick of the heroine of SRW Destiny, Cliana Rimskaya. One is a rougher, stoic girl that is capable of piloting and kicking ass, one is a borderline sweet Yamato Nadeshiko.
 * Sheogorath, the Daedric Prince of Madness from The Elder Scrolls series is
 * This was deliberate, though. When all the other Daedric Princes realised how powerful was becoming, they used their vaguely established powers to curse him to become the very thing he hated the most.
 * The Shivering Isles also contains a village called 'split' where each citizen has been turned into two people based on their Manic and a Demented sides.
 * In Um Jammer Lammy Captain Fussenpepper has a Split Personality making him either, The Ditz who can't tell right from left, or a Drill Sergeant Nasty and War Hero.
 * In [MetalGearSolid2:SonsOfLiberty\], the protagonist Raiden was  This will be further explored in the upcoming [MetalGearRising:Revengeance\].
 * In Portable Ops:
 * Crying Wolf of Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots suffers from a split personality. The "wolf" personality and the "crying" personality
 * Screaming Mantis also. The mantis persona was created by her psyche to justify the cannibalism required for her survival.
 * Socks, the lunatic boxer from Facebreaker has two personality (a nice, English-accented intellectual .and an angry psychopath) which manifests in the sock puppets that he uses for boxing gloves.
 * Similarly, a pirate appears in Escape from Monkey Island who has developed two additional personalities in order to cope with having his ego shattered by the Ultimate Insult. They are manifested through the puppets he wears in a Punch and Judy type of show, which themselves take on the forms of the series' hero and villain in appearance, though not so much in personality.
 * Tira, from Soul Calibur IV, has had her brain broken by prolonged exposure to Soul Edge, and she flips back and forth between her original "joyous" personality (where she'll kill you with a smile on her face) and her "malicious" one (where she'll just kill you).
 * Not to forget Siegfried, before Nightmare could fully take over (and before Nightmare became a completely separate entity) Siegfried and Nightmare were sharing one body and Siegfried would usually wake up covered in blood.
 * from Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines. You never get the whole story, but the conversation you have with them after the fight in the diner suggested the split either happened when It's also possible that  was a real person, and that  killed her after finding her in bed with her father--
 * In Clock Tower II: The Struggle Within, the entire storyline is based around a girl who has a malevolent split personality.
 * Ben and Trilo from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Justice for All seem to have something similar to Batman's Ventriloquist, in that Ben's doll Trilo acts as if it has a mind of its own and routinely beats up its owner.
 * Trilo also seems to forget he's a doll at times - at one point, he tries to get Ben to sing with him in a round.
 * Tohno Shiki from Tsukihime, with a twist: despite barely appearing, the.
 * Emil Castagnier from Tales of Symphonia: Dawn of the New World. Normally, he's very timid, sweet, and cowardly. But when he goes into his humorously named, "Ratatosk Mode", he turns much more vicious and merciless. Though,, but still...
 * In Tales of Vesperia, whether or not he has this is still up for debate, but  sure don't act like the same person.
 * is his Obfuscating Stupidity disguise, with hints of Becoming the Mask.
 * Brad Kilstein from Psychic Force. For someone who is voiced by Ryusei Nakao, he is surprisingly soft-hearted and abhors fighting and violence. However, at one point, his personality may revert into the typical Ryusei Nakao character: a brutal, sadistic Ax Crazy Psycho for Hire.
 * Eternal Darkness' Xel'lotath speaks in two voices - one is well-spoken, rational-sounding, and almost as imperious-sounding as the paper to her scissors Ulyaoth. The other sounds extremely paranoid and somewhat delusional, always using a quiet but harsh whisper. And with the remarks each voice makes, it sounds like she could hold a full-blown conversation with herself. Suitably, she is the goddess of insanity.
 * Sakubo, a character of .hack/GU, has a serious case of this. Originally stating he and his sister shared a character, we later find out they LITERALLY share the character. Saku, the girl side, is the more violent side and Bo, the actual person, is a shy boy who developed Saku to help him stand up for himself. It's essentially like sticking Blackrose and Elk into one body. Add in the fact that Saku is obsessed with 'White Haired Pretty Boy' Endrance and things get a little weird if you think on it too long...
 * Dinah, one of the spirits from Summon Night: Swordcraft Story 2 has a Good Angel, Bad Angel split personality. The "bad angel" personality is the default one, though sometimes her "good angel" side will shine through every now and then to apologize profusely for Bad!Dinah's rudeness.
 * Or when she needs extreme courage.
 * Tink from Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories has two sides - the "blue" personality, which is calm, polite and timid, and the "red" personality, which is lecherous, short-tempered, rude and selfish. It takes a magic spell to suppress his "red" side in the cutscenes, though he can switch between them freely in actual gameplay. When in the "red" side, he gets a boost to his stats by being near female characters.
 * Agent Francis York Morgan of Deadly Premonition often has conversations with "Zach", to the confusion of others.
 * Ethan from Heavy Rain experiences occasional blackouts, and he believes that these blackouts occur when his alternate personality (who he believes is the Origami Killer, who is responsible for kidnapping his son) takes over.
 * Zoya, Pontius, and Amadeus from Trine probably don't count, since they're three separate people bound to an artifact that lets only one of them exist at a time, not three personalities in one body. But it's similar.
 * In Remember 11: The Age of Infinity, Keiko Inubushi suffers from Dissociative Identity Disorder, resulting in her being sent to the SPHIA psychiatric hospital when one of her personalities commits several murders. Later, protagonists Kokoro and Satoru allow their companions to believe this about them (They are actually undergoing a series of Freaky Friday Flips, but find that its easier to convince their companions "I have two personalities", rather than "My mind randomly switches with somebody else's").
 * Played realistically (for once) in Mass Effect 1 with the character of Talitha, who only shows up in certain branches of the Player Character's Multiple Choice Past. She was kidnapped by batarian slavers as a child; after her release, she is a Third Person Person who perceives her abusive experiences as having happened to someone else. And it's incredibly powerful, making you wonder why more writers don't play it straight.
 * It's hard, and Viewers are Morons and Reality Is Unrealistic; the result is a lot of work going in to something that no one is going to appreciate and will, in fact, pick apart because they have the wrong idea about how the disorder works.
 * Inazuma Eleven 2's Fubuki Shirou has a special mention of a Split Personality aside from other characters with dual modes. His regular persona, a soft spoken and timid defender, and his alter persona,  a Hot-Blooded and reckless forward. The issue is developed further in the story.
 * GO has Kariya Masaki, who acts sweet generally except to Kirino; which is hinted to be his true nature.
 * Gemini from Sakura Wars (Sakura Taisen 5) seems to be pulling a not-very-convincing masked vigilante act, until it's eventually revealed that she has a sister Geminine... living inside her.

Visual Novels

 * in A Profile claims this, but Kaine claims it's incredibly unlikely because not only is DID extremely rare, but her behavior simply doesn't match up to what it should because the claimed personalities are aware of each other, which defeats the whole point.

Web Comics

 * In the relatively unknown webcomic Jix, the titular character is the second personality of an invader, Remula, from an alien race who was surveying Earth. She stayed on Earth until she was sane again.
 * She's manifested two more personalities since then, Lamerix the Mad Scientist, and (male) superhero The Ambis.
 * Kano, the protagonist of Kagerou has several personalities. The personality that answers to "Kano" is initially not aware of the others.
 * Mountain Time has Donna the Bears, who has multiple personalities that are all bears.
 * Somewhat minor character Clive/Ernest in Concession, Clive is passive and straight, while Ernest is gay and rather assertive
 * Bob and George George has an attack before the personality realizes it has the wrong character—and work.
 * Homestuck:
 * An odd example too in that both of the personalities are nearly identical, but both speak with personal pronouns. In a sense the character doesn't really qualify.
 * Gemini is a slice-of-life about Bernie and Z, and their life as multiple (and Z's transgenderism)
 * Chelsea Grinn of Chimneyspeak has four, progressively less sane, personalities.
 * Derek and Dwayne of Moon Crest 24 both have the spirits of Drake and Daniel inside them respectively. While Dwayne is aware of Daniel, Derek is not.

Web Original
"Evan: You may scare Evan, but he's just a bitch."
 * In Red vs. Blue, the Director of Project Freelancer induced a split personality into the Alpha AI so he could easily harvest multiple AIs from the one.
 * There is a possibility that The Spoony One has a split personality named 'Dr. Insano'.
 * Confirmed—for Kickassia, at least.
 * Merry, in the Whateley Universe, has four personalities: Chaddy, her more innocent child self; Chad, her cynical, distrustful, early adolescent self; Merry, the most normal one and the dominant personality; and Mai, an evil AI she defeated that took up residence in and merged partially with her mind. Eventually these four were separated into pairs when Merry got accidentally cloned; Chad and Chaddy now live in Petra's head, while Merry and Mai now live in Paige's. And to those of you wondering why two of those personalities have male names . . . it's the Whateley Universe. Figure it out. Fey, meanwhile, doesn't so much have a Split Personality as she actually has another person in her head, specifically Aunghadhail, an ancient Sidhe queen who died millenia ago but is now Back from the Dead, sort of.
 * In the Global Guardians PBEM Universe, heroic crimefighter Arsenal has no idea that she is also the psychotic assassin Demise.
 * Everyman HYBRID heavily implies this with a recent line of dialog:


 * Flippy from Happy Tree Friends has an Axe Crazy one named Fliqpy.
 * Wishing Star was recently reveled to have this in the form of Dark Star.
 * Kaleigh Jones from v1 of Survival of the Fittest had two, in the form of child-like "Carly" and nymphomaniac "Freya". Bizarrely, Kaleigh seemed capable of deciding which of her personalities was in control and when.

Western Animation
""Father": We're actors, remember? You cancelled our show because you whined you weren't getting enough attention! Baby Doll: But I knows now I made a boo-boo! (as Dahl) It was hard for me out there. I studied and trained and auditioned, but no one wanted me. Over the years I remembered how happy I was with all you around me, and the folks at home watching me each week... Me. (as Baby) Baby Doll. Hee hee! Now I'm Baby for good, and everyone will love me again!"
 * Played more seriously in Batman the Animated Series with the "evil" personality of Two-Face almost completely consuming the mind of Harvey Dent to the point where the "good" personality rarely surfaced again, much to Batman's dismay.
 * This got taken to a weird extreme when the killer vigilante "The Judge" appeared and started trying to kill Batman's rogue's gallery, including Two-Face, with death traps.
 * In the same series, Baby Doll alternated between being Baby, the Cheerful Child she once played and whom she had slipped into in obsession, and Mary Dahl, the sane adult woman. Her account of how it split was a Tear Jerker. Watch from 8:30 for it.

"Mr Mackey: Mr Garrison, are you alright? Mr Hat: Mr. Garrison isn't here right now... Mr Mackey: Mkay, Mr Garrison, you're just having a hard time dealing with the memories of your father's sexual abuse, so you've switched personalities to Mr Hat. Mr Hat: Ooh, good one Sherlock, you figured out all that by yourself?"
 * And then there was the Ventriloquist and Scarface, the latter of which was a separate personality of the former, embodied in a ventriloquist dummy with a machine gun. Both personalities are present at the same time, it's just that the Ventriloquist can't acknowledge that he's the one working Mr. Scarface and giving him voice rather than the puppet being his own person. It's occasionally hinted that Scarface has a will of his own, but that's just silly.
 * The Batman takes this even further: Scarface's ventriloquist is "Reformed" by being given a new puppet meant to be a "Good" alternate personality.
 * The Batman the Animated Series version of Scarface episode went so far as to describe the Ventriloquist and his dummy as two separate people who were born trapped in the same body, with Batman making an analogy to Siamese twins. Split Personalities Do Not Work That Way, to put it mildly, but the series did go on to provide a more realistic portrayal of Dissociative Identity Disorder with Two-Face, whose personalities are different facets of Harvey's mind.
 * In the earlier seasons of South Park, Mr Garrison's hand puppet Mr Hat was his other personality and imaginary friend that helped him to deal with sexual abuse and transexual thoughts. Pretty much said in "World Wide Recorder Concert":

"Icy: Ze jet. Hothead: Tank! Icy: Jet. Hothead: Tank! Random: Ooh-ooh! Why not scan both?"
 * However, as is later revealed, Garrison feels traumatized by the fact his father didn't molest him.
 * Parodied in the episode "City Sushi" where Dr. Janus diagnoses Butters with multiple personality disorder, identifying Postman Butters, Fireman Butters, Big Rig Butters, Inspector Butters, Porn Star Butters, and Professor Chaos. Meanwhile, Janus in fact does have other personalities.
 * And one of them
 * Janus has four personalities in total: himself, Billy, a young boy, a violent, unnamed criminal, and
 * Blitzwing of Transformers Animated, with a face to go with each personality. Blitzwing's weaponry and vehicle modes seem to be tied into his personality (in the only interpersonality conflict he's had so far, his angry and calm faces argued over which vehicle form to scan). The calm face uses some sort of ice missile and a jet form, while the angry face uses a flamethrower and tank form and the crazy face seems to be able to use both - but is not as skilled with either. Prowl actually caught on to this during a battle, and used Bumblebee to annoy Blitzwing so much that he switched from calm/jet to angry/tank—and promptly fell out of the sky.
 * Word of God gives the personalities the names of Icy, Hothead, and Random respectively.
 * Note: Blitzwing's personalities technically aren't different people; they're just immediate shifts between certain states. As seen in the falling tank incident, he'll often swap depending on his mood/the situation—you'll never see Icy get angry or Hothead act happy.
 * Though there is the infrequent time that the three states interact with each other as if they were separate people. They once even debated over a vehicle mode choice:

""I was born in 200 log cabins.""
 * Dr. Rockso, the Rock n' Roll Clown (he does cocaine) in Metalocalypse. Dr. Rockso is the dominant personality, but amicable troublemaker Leonard Rockstein briefly succeeded in suppressing him just long enough to make his return all the more surprising.
 * Played for Laughs as a twist in American Dad! when Roger, the alien with the Paper-Thin Disguise, hunts down someone who used his credit card only to discover it's himself, as a persona of his that gained a will of its own.
 * Parodied in Futurama's Soap Within a Show All My Circuits in "Beast With A Billion Backs," as Calculon discovers he has a fourth split personality. And that it's having an affair with Monique behind his main personality's back.
 * In the episode Insane in the Mainframe, Fry encounters a robot Abraham Lincoln in the robot asylum. The problem isn't that he thinks he's Lincoln, but that he has multiple personalities, all of which are Lincoln.

"Dr. Splitz: Uh, don't you have anything to add, Splitzy? Splitzy: I ain't talkin' to you!"
 * Dr. Splitz/Splitzy in Captain Simian and The Space Monkeys. Apart from his Meaningful Name, he's also notable in being The Smart Guy. Sort of. Dr. Splitz is incredibly intelligent and ingenuous, while Splitzy is an impulsive moron. However, they both seem to share incredible knowledge of electronics and machinery, and Splitzy's irrationality sometimes comes in handy when Dr. Splitz is hesitant.
 * They also actually go back and forth between acting like one person with two personalities and interacting with one another.


 * Ace Lightning has Random Virus, a cyborg with one good and one evil personality. He's constantly fighting between them though how much these two sides of him are indivdiuals is unclear.
 * In Beavis and Butthead, The Great Cornholio makes his appearance whenever Beavis has too much sugar and/or caffeine, and when he comes back to himself (usually in some awkward situation), he doesn't remember Cornholio's actions.
 * Total Drama Island's season four cast features Mike, labeled the Multiple Personality Disorder, who has four alternate personalities that even have their own names:
 * Grumpy Old Man (Chester)
 * Foreign Exchange Student and gymnast (Svetlana)
 * Jerkass from Joisey (Vito)
 * Awesome Aussie (Manitoba Smith)
 * Lampshaded/played with in The Mask episode... Split Personality. The character is already two personas in one, but subverts the trope as the second personality can only come out when Stanley puts on the mask and changes. However, in this episode, the mask itself is split down the middle, and Stanley puts on one half. The results were... interesting, with half of his body changed into The Mask and the other half left alone. Both characters were sharing one body at the same time. This leads to some very interesting circumstances as Stanley has to try to hide this while half his body is changed. The other half of the mask? It gets worn by Stanley's old high school bully, who ends up with a psychotic murderous half that even manages to freak out the normal side.
 * Roger from American Dad, maybe. He has hundreds of "personas" he uses to live among humans, almost to the point of one per episode (though some are recurring and he's killed off quite a few of them) and it's sometimes hard to tell whether they're just disguises or separate aspects of his personality. The wide variation (some are good, some are evil, some are male, some are female, along with every type of career imaginable) plus the fact that many of his personas show disdain or even rivalries with other personas brings the situation into question.

Real Life

 * There is a sizable online community of multiples, who say that they are "systems" consisting of multiple personalities, with some being non-human, fictional and/or historical characters. However, given the debated status of DID as a genuine condition, its particularly high frequency of self-diagnoses and that online multiples' stated conditions often differ from the documented symptoms, their legitimacy is questionable.
 * Anne Heche claims (or at least once claimed) to have multiple personalities.
 * Herschel Walker was a former football player with tons of personalities, for instance, The Hero and The Professional White Man.
 * Kenneth Bianchi, one half of The Hillside Stranglers, attempted to set up an insanity defence. He claimed to have another personality named Steve Walker and, according to Bianchi, Walker was the killer - Bianchi himself was innocent. He managed to fool a couple of psychiatrists before the whole charade collapsed.
 * There have been several autobiographies written by people with DID; for instance, The Flock: The Autobiography of a Multiple Personality by Joan Frances Casey and When Rabbit Howls by the Troops for Truddi Chase. Truddi Chase has also appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
 * In an interesting phenomenon, virtually everyone self-diagnoses themself with this after hearing about the symptoms and problems related to it, so much so that it's mentioned in textbooks immediately after describing the phenomenon. Of course, this means that genuinely finding a real case is somewhat difficult, however it does mean that most people feel like they have conflicting personalities so there's a fine line between genuine DID and simply being a normal person.
 * Among psychologists and mental health professionals, Dissociative Identity Disorder is probably one of the most controversial 'disorders' ever. This is because virtually all cases seem to occur only in the U.S, the U.K, and Canada- in other words, where movies that have protagonists with DID are popular (Sybil, The Faces Of Eve, Fight Club, etc). Diagnoses of DID skyrocketed following the release of Sybil from maybe one or two diagnosed cases a year to several thousand. This suggests to many psychologists that it's less an actual disorder and more of a fad, since otherwise there'd be a better distribution of diagnoses in other countries and it wouldn't follow movie trends like this. The actual diagnosis rate of DID is maybe <1 in 1000 to 1 in 10,000. It's exceptionally rare. It's normal to act differently around other groups of people (we're obviously going to act differently around friends vs family)- blacking out for extended periods of time and 'losing control', with no recollection of it, is not.
 * There is a related condition - a mental event known as "disassociative fugue" - where the sufferer loses a large chunk of their history and wanders off with no idea of who they are. Some documented cases have established themselves in a completely different life from the one that they left. And it can occur ideopathically and spontaneously - i.e. with no known cause and with no warning. Fugue tends to be associated with some form of traumatic event, but doesn't have to be. Scared yet? Fortunately, it's very, very, very rare.
 * The "Society of Mind" hypothesis states that all humans are Mind Hives.
 * Gaia/Nomura from Baki the Grappler.