There are very few celebrities who managed to stay genuinely anonymous in the internet age, but Daft Punk pulled it off. For many younger fans, especially those who discovered them through Get Lucky with Pharrell or “I Feel It Coming” with The Weeknd, in the minds of many younger fans, the duo existed almost entirely as helmeted figures. So when unmasked photos resurfaced on Reddit, fans weren’t shocked by how they looked, but by the simple fact that they looked like regular people at all, something many had just never bothered to search for or think about.
The internet’s reaction: Not robots after all
On Reddit, images of Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo were posted, and people couldn’t believe they were finally seeing the human faces behind Daft Punk.
Image: Reddit
Plenty of users admitted they had imagined almost anything but two ordinary-looking French guys. One commenter wrote:“I mean, it’s not like I’d recognise them if I saw them on the street nor would I believe either of them if they told me they were in Daft Punk.” Another joked:“Wow Daft Punk looks like a pair of cheesy 70s French guys, who could have ever guessed. What a revelation. Everyone’s shocked.” Some confessed they did_not_want reality:“There was a time when I was so curious and wanted to see their faces. Then I just accepted my fate, I wish I could unsee their faces.”Stranger Things fans were quick to point out the resemblance between Thomas Bangalter and Brett Gelman’s character Murray Bauman: “Thomas is Murray from Stranger Things?” And another lamented:“I never wanted to know what they looked like, I’ll never forgive you.” Someone else added, almost theatrically:“To me, this even seems like a cursed image lol. Could’ve lived my days knowing them only as robots who made killer dance tracks and I would’ve been content.”Of course, the photos themselves aren’t new. Older fans and anyone who’s gone beyond a casual Google search will have seen Bangalter bare-faced at film premieres in France, or behind the decks in Miami in the late ’90s. Over the years they’ve given mask-off interviews and been photographed plenty of times.
Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo (L) and Thomas Bangalter (R) of the iconic French group, Daft Punk Credit: Rex Features via The Sun
Image: Instagram
What’s changed is who’s discovering them. A younger wave of listeners came in through the big 2010s moments, Random Access Memories, the Weeknd collabs like “Starboy” and “I Feel It Coming”, and even their post-split demo “Infinity Repeating”, released in 2023. For a lot of that crowd, Daft Punk have only ever existed as chrome and gold helmets, not as two middle-aged French guys in leather jackets.
Daft Punk/ Image: X
So the Reddit thread didn’t really uncover some guarded secret. it just surfaced a reality many newer fans had never bothered to look up, and weren’t entirely sure they wanted to.
The real humans behind the myth
Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo were never intentionally faceless, we’ve always known their names, and they’ve occasionally appeared without masks. Bangalter was profiled mask-less in The New York Times in 2023, and he was completely candid about moving beyond the robot persona. He told the paper:“My priorities in the world in 2023 are on the side of the humans, not the machines. I have absolutely no desire or intentions to be a robot in 2023. There is absolutely not one reason I would want to be one.” Before they were Daft Punk, they were a small Parisian act called Darlin’, until a critic dismissed their sound as “a daft punky trash.” Rather than sulk, they turned the insult into a brand, and one of the most recognisable identities in music. Daft Punk dominated the French house movement, fusing funk, disco, rock and pop, and creating songs like Around the World, Da Funk, and eventually global megahit Get Lucky. Across their career, they won six Grammys, including four in one night in 2014. They disbanded in 2021, closing a 28-year run. Their final original track during their active years was “I Feel It Coming” in 2016, and in 2023 they released the archival demo “Infinity Repeating”, introduced publicly as their “last song ever”.


