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Yes, I do, but only because the other theories make even less sense. The 3 main interpretations of the observations made by quantum mechanics are the Copenhagen interpretation, the pilot wave theory, and the many worlds hypothesis. They're made to explain the weirdness of wave-particle duality
The Copenhagen interpretation is the most accepted interpretation, and it (essentially) states that particles are just waves until they are observed, which collapses the wave back into a particle. In other words, the wave is a physical, real thing.
The pilot wave theory says that the particle stays a particle, and the wave that we observe is just a wave of probability that "pushes" the particle along, like a surfer being pushed by a tidal wave.
The many worlds hypothesis agrees with the pilot wave theory in saying that the wave isn't a physical thing, but says that the wave of probability exists because the particle is being split across multiple timelines, and we can only observe 1 timeline, thus making the particle inherently probabilistic.
Out of the 3, the many worlds hypothesis makes the most sense to me. But I don't believe in it in the way that people think about it colloquially. The particle splitting is an extremely small event, so there's probably like a billion timelines that are just exactly like the current one