Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Fridge / Ib

Go To

1'''As a Fridge subpage, all spoilers are unmarked [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff as per policy.]] Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned.'''
2----
3[[WMG: {{Fridge Brilliance}}]]
4* Garry, Ib, and Mary have the primary colors of paint as their rose colors in an art-themed game.
5** While red, blue, and yellow are famously known to be the primary colors of pigment, the primary colors of light are red, blue, and green, which are reflected by either the stems of the roses or the way Mary's dress is green. Though Mary's yellow rose is the odd one out, she is still trying to appear like she belongs.
6* If you try to look into a mirror with Mary in your party (which you probably won't, since it involves otherwise pointless backtracking), the mirror shatters — probably because [[GlamourFailure false humans have no reflections]], which would have quickly revealed that Mary is actually one of the artworks.
7* When Ib is with Mary, she almost never runs into enemies. It's because Mary's also a painting, and wants to escape with Ib. Also, the other artworks are like family to Mary.
8* The painting that uses unnatural vines to separate Garry from Mary and Ib is the Flowers of Jealousy. Mary also uses vines to protect her things and her yellow rose can mean envy or jealousy as well as friendship.
9** It's also shown in "A Painting's Demise" that the other paintings don't approve of Mary leaving (writing on the wall calls her a bad girl). The Flowers of Jealousy are jealous that Mary is going to leave.
10* The painting of a figure in brown was not killed for helping Ib, but for telling the truth, [[CategoryTraitor of all things]], in the [[MeaningfulName Liar's Room]].
11* The Painting Ladies become "enamored" with any humans and chase them relentlessly because they enjoy playing "loves me, loves me not" with roses and ''know'' that ''every human has a rose''. This is proven by the fact, that every encounter with them is fatal as they pluck your rose's petals and indeed you find one Lady playing with Garry's rose. She had no reason to bother him any longer once she got her hands on his rose. That's just how much of a scum they are.
12** The other reason they follow you around almost hungrily is because, according to the in-game exposition Guertena based them on [[GoldDigger Gold Diggers]] he met in his life, and as a result they are greedy just by their nature.
13* If you head for the BonusDungeon while Garry is with you, Garry comments that he feels like he's been by those stairs before. This sounds odd, as Ib's never seen those particular stairs in her life, but then you realize those stairs lead you to an alternate version of the Lady in Blue's hallway.
14** Some of the dialogue you might get when talking to Garry after returning his coat also has him mention having difficulty remembering how exactly he got to the alternate gallery, but mentions that he saw some stairs where there had been a wall before.
15* If you're on the path for "A Painting's Demise", you briefly get to play as Mary. There is no rose in the upper left-hand corner. Because she doesn't need one; her SoulJar is her painting.
16* Ib sometimes sees rabbits instead of dolls. If you fall asleep on "Final Stage", you see some of Ib's memories, and learn that her bedroom is ''full'' of stuffed rabbits and she's very fond of them. So that's why she keeps seeing rabbits!
17* You'd think Mary would be angrier at you for winning the doll room than failing, since failing is in her interest as it causes Garry to forget her secret, while winning it leads to Garry stopping Mary from attacking Ib. But failing is the highest weighted action that adds to the counter that decides whether Mary's angry enough to kill Garry at the end. If you succeed, then when Garry stops Mary, she's still having a breakdown, so she's too upset to be angry, whereas if you fail, Mary either didn't have a breakdown at all or has had time to calm down. She's less scattered, so she can be properly angry. About Ib bringing Garry to his senses. And Garry handling Mary's rose. And Garry knocking Mary out. And Garry going and remembering Mary's secret anyway.
18** This might also imply that she doesn't actually ''want'' to harm him, [[BlueAndOrangeMorality just kill him]] so she [[BecomeARealBoy can replace him]]. It's not personal, and she doesn't want any ''needless'' cruelty (apart from tearing the petals off his rose, which is necessary for her to kill him), so she may be [[AngerBornOfWorry worried about his mental state]]. ...Or maybe she doesn't like the stress it puts ''Ib'' under, either or.
19* The new endings provide another reason why Mary wants to make friends with Ib so quickly and can only leave with her. In "A Painting's Demise", Mary refers to "The Lady In Red" as her big sister. Since Ib and her mother look a lot like "The Lady In Red" Ib reminds Mary of her "big sis", and in "Together, Forever", Ib ends up being Mary's big sister in the real world as well.
20** Another reason why Mary singles out Ib so much may be because Ib is a foil to her. She has everything that Mary doesn't — a family, a friend, a sense of belonging. Their personalities are also completely opposite — Mary is bubbly, energetic, talkative, and a little lightheaded, and Ib is solemn, withdrawn, and serious. Like they say, opposites attract.
21* Garry's rose has 10 petals on it. Since it's an even number, the last one would always be "loves me not", except then Mary counts the stem to get "he loves me".
22** During her mental breakdown, Mary has a chance of mentioning a special trick to always get "loves me"; count the stem if you end on "loves me not".
23* You don't see anything through the peephole in that one door in the purple area. The statue peering back doesn't have a head.
24* There are a couple of things about Ib, Mary, and Garry that [[{{Foreshadowing}} hint at the nature of the endings]]: You can only save one or the other, not both, no matter what you do; many things connect them in pairs, but few, if any, that connect all three.
25** The roses. Mary and Garry's are both "unreal", but in different ways. Mary's rose is from her painting and no more real than she is, but blue roses don't exist in nature. Ib's is real, and can pair with either "real" rose, or is the one left out if both are taken as unreal.
26** Their names. Mary and Garry rhyme; Ib (pronounced "eeb" and identical in Japanese to "Eve") and Mary share a Biblical origin; Ib and Garry are alternate spellings.
27** Their depictions in and connections to artwork. Garry and Ib are both depicted in paintings (if depicted at all) as being dead; Mary and Ib are both depicted with roses (the same rose, in fact, in the ''A Painting's Demise'' ending), Garry and Mary are both emotionally connected to a specific work (Mary has her own painting; Garry is drawn to the Hanged Man from the very start of the game), plus both have the ability to move the headless statues.
28* In the bunny room, you can read a book that talks about how a person spiritually suffering will hallucinate and be destroyed, all while not being conscious of it. Not only does it reference how Ib sees the creepy dolls as cute bunnies, among other things, but it foreshadows what happens if you sleep too much on the [[MeaningfulName Final Stage]], in the hidden gallery: you dream of a happy life to escape the reality of the gallery, then you don't wake up.
29* The Liars' Room. The liars punish the truth-teller for telling Ib the truth, right? After all, it ''is'' the Liars' Room, so how did the truth-telling painting end up there in the first place? Simple: ''It lied about being a liar'', and telling Ib the truth outed it to the others!
30** If asked "are you a liar?", ''every painting in the room would answer "no"''.
31** If you talk to the other paintings after they killed the one who helped Ib, they'll all call the dead painting a liar, sounding pretty pissed.
32* It's mentioned that the blue dolls are an oddity that Guertena probably didn't create like everything else in the gallery. Which means it's most likely they were made by Mary, especially since she seems to think they're so cute and they're happy to help her when she needs it. So what book did Ib and Garry find in Mary's room? ''How To Make Friends''. Mary had quite literally been "making friends"!
33* At first, there seems to be no point to ''Carrie Careless and the Galette des Rois'' other than to freak out the player some more. However, it's actually there to foreshadow what Garry will need to do to escape the Doll Room, i.e. cut a key out of one of their stomachs.
34* Thinking about it, Mary doesn't seem to have any ill will towards Garry at all, and seems to consider him a friend:
35** As a pale imitation of a small child, she suffers from BlueAndOrangeMorality, is very immature & somewhat lacking in basic knowledge about the real world, and her sanity is fragile at best; she can snap and threaten Garry with her knife. This might look like she hates him, but if she doesn't snap and threaten Garry, she'll snap and threaten ''Ib'' instead. And we know that she sees Ib as her first real friend, so the {{Ax Craz|y}}iness probably isn't as telling as it seems.
36** In particular, the thing that makes her snap at Garry instead of Ib is if you fail the doll room. She's angrier at Garry for being driven temporarily insane than if he gets out and remembers her secret. This suggests that it might be AngerBornOfWorry, more than anything else.
37** If she kills him, she plucks the petals from his rose one at a time, gruesomely shredding his body in the process. It seems cruel... but a book confirms that the denizens of the Cursed Gallery like to play "love me, or love me not?" It's very possible that she has a predilection (or possibly even compulsion) to pluck the petals one at a time, as a game.
38** It seems mean to kill Garry at all, but as far as she knows, she ''needs'' to kill someone to be able to {{Become A Real|Boy}} Girl. Her general attitude suggests it's NothingPersonal.
39** In "Welcome to the World of Guertena", she stays behind with both Ib and Garry, her first two friends. We see that one of the Painted Ladies has his rose... but if she didn't think of Garry as a friend, then he probably wouldn't be there ''at all'', would he?
40** In "A Painting's Demise" (IIRC), when she's terrified, she calls out for Ib or Garry to save her. If she hated Garry, then she'd probably only want Ib to save her, right?
41* In the ending "Together, Forever", Mary's shadow seems to be a scribble, implying that her transformation [[GlamourFailure didn't fully work out]].
42* "Puppet", Mary's theme, is the only song in the game in the MIDI format. Since the songs of this format are sequences played in real time with a limited soundbank, it appears to sound more artificial than the rest of the soundtrack.
43* When first meeting Mary, there's a few hints that something's up:
44** Garry can be found in the gallery at the beginning of the game (although he won't say anything if Ib tries talking to him) but Mary is nowhere to be seen. This is an early hint that Mary isn't actually one of the gallery's patrons; she's part of it herself.
45** Mary notably doesn't actually give an answer to Garry's question about being one of the people from the gallery like him and Ib. Garry quickly changes the subject by asking her to join them, but there's a reason why Mary struggled to come up with an answer: because she didn't have one.
46** Ib and Garry quite literally run into Mary after walking through a door. Said door appears almost immediately after Garry takes out his lighter, thus alerting the gallery to it. It's highly likely the gallery intentionally led Mary to the two after it saw they were carrying a fire-starting tool, hence why she was in such a hurry. The reason why Mary was so caught off guard was because Ib and Garry went through the door earlier than expected, or she wasn't expecting the culprits to be an adult male and a little girl like herself.
47** Mary is the only one of the main characters to have her own theme, which automatically indicates that she's important. She is-- she's the BigBad.
48** Going back and attempting to look at the mirror with Mary in your party causes the mirror to shatter. As a painting, Mary doesn't have a reflection, so the gallery deliberately broke the mirror to prevent Ib and Garry from seeing that.
49** Mary may make a comment that she never ran into any artworks that attempted to kill her, and gets visibly confused when Garry brings it up. Being part of the gallery itself, Mary never knew any of the other works as malicious because they were all friendly to each other. This is also why there's no enemies in Ib and Mary's section of the brown area: the gallery was letting Mary pass, and she wanted to leave with Ib, so it left them alone.
50** Ib and Mary come across a storage room with nothing of interest aside from a pallet knife, which Mary takes. It's highly likely that the gallery knew Mary had already made up her mind on who she wanted to leave with, so it gave her the knife to get rid of her competition, and that Ib wouldn't question her having it due to her age.
51* If Ib is on the route to the "Together Forever" ending, why does the gallery still attempt to kill her in the bonus dungeon (including attempting to trick her into sleeping on the bed)? Because at this point, Mary is extremely close to achieving her goal, and she just needs Ib to show her the exit so she can leave. It's likely the gallery is punishing Ib for wandering off instead of going straight to the exit painting and leading Mary to the real world. This also calls back to Ib's mother's warning at the beginning of the game to not go wandering off: because the gallery gets angry and attempts to kill her if she does.
52
53[[WMG: {{Fridge Horror}}]]
54* People whose roses are injured in the painting world are wounded. But when Ib finds Garry after Mary finishes plucking his rose, she comments that he looks like he's just sleeping. Ib is known to hallucinate. Wanna bet she subconsciously censored [[{{Gorn}} what actually happened to Garry?]]
55** Checking the paintings near the beginning of the game reveals Ib ''does'' know the word "death" and she recognizes blood on the floor in the area where Garry's rose is found. This means Ib may be subconsciously aware that Garry isn't simply "sleeping", but she's convincing herself otherwise because she doesn't want to consider the alternative.
56* [[ParanoiaFuel Just what the hell is in the moving box?!]]
57* The endings "Ib All Alone": Depending on how you've completed the game, you discovered the portrait that leads back to the real world with Garry. Even though you decide to jump into the painting, Ib's mother arrives and scolds her for running off with strangers. You can choose to either go with Ib's mother or head back to the real world with Garry. If you choose to stay, Ib will follow her mother, only for a static ScareChord and a split-second screen black-out to reveal that Ib is following ''nothing'', all while Garry is calling to her from within the portal. Let this sink in for a moment; you've done everything in your power to save this girl, and now she's trapped in the painting world forever, trailing an illusion she believes is her mother.
58** The second version is much crueler, as Ib heads back to the portal ''alone'', since Garry dies from exchanging his rose with Mary, who plucks the petal off of it, in order to retrieve Ib's from her. Just as you choose to go back to the real world, Garry appears and convinces Ib that the exit to go back was somewhere else. The choice to follow Garry simply ends with Ib following him off-screen, and that's it.[[NothingIsScarier And you don't even know what happens afterwards]], or where the Fake Garry is taking Ib.
59** Both of these events take place after Mary's painting is burned, thus killing her. Considering how the gallery reacts when Garry damages the artworks, it's easy to guess it must have been ''furious'' at Ib for killing one of their own. Heck, in regards to the fake Garry, he actually ''sprints'' at Ib and attempts to grab her if she chooses to ignore him and jump into the painting. This indicates something ''very'' bad is in store for Ib if she chooses to follow the fake doppelganger...
60* Mary has to switch places with a real human to escape the painting world, which she plans to accomplish by killing Garry. Additionally, in the endings where Garry dies, he replaces a portrait in the gallery, and a clone of him will try to lead Ib away from the exit. But what if it ''isn't'' a fake? [[TheVirus Does being killed by a painting monster turn you into one of them?]]
61* Apparently, it is possible to lose your memory and not regain it after you leave the art world. Also, people outside the world can have their memories changed, like Ib's parents in Together Forever. Guertana seemingly didn't base most of his paintings on real people, but in the Forgotten Portrait ending, Garry takes the place of the Hanged Man painting. What if some of his paintings actually ARE real people who died in the art world and no one remembers that they were real? What if this whole cycle repeats itself endlessly, with nobody on the outside world noticing that people go missing? What if the monsters that tried to kill Ib and Garry were only doing so because they desperately wanted to escape?
62** The painting you piece back together in the BonusDungeon is a man (whose face is out of frame) holding a paintbrush titled "Guertena". Garry points out the man never did a self-portrait. Oh boy.
63** Worse: he isn't just holding a paintbrush in the painting, there's green paint on his canvas. Green paint of an oddly familiar shade and something that looks like an outline of a skirt and a tiny leg. There may be a reason Mary was both his last and his most life-like painting — he breathed all of his life energy into her and left none for himself.
64* In one of the books, you can read about a little girl that got lost in the gallery and later died, which seemed to be based on Ib as a worst-case scenario. If the above theories are true, then that girl was probably Mary, and the fact that she was Guertana's last work can create [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone interesting]] [[DrivenToSuicide implications.]]
65** Alternatively, it's a description of what will happen to Ib in the "Ib All Alone" endings.
66** Or, considering the title parallels and the even closer match, the book could be referring to Mary in the "A Painting's Demise" ending.
67** It's likely that the book tailors itself to whoever is reading it. When Ib is reading it, the story mentions the girl's parents and her being hungry and thirsty, but when Mary is reading it, these words blur together, because Mary doesn't have parents and cannot get hungry or thirsty.
68* The "Welcome to the World of Guertena" ending in 1.04. Garry goes utterly insane. Ib has a breakdown over this. Mary keeps them both trapped in her world, forever. Ib's parents and any friends or family Garry might have are never going to see either of them again. To make it even worse, in the gallery's celebration of Mary having two new friends, Ib and Garry weren't moving at all, making Mary's keeping them a possible MummiesAtTheDinnerTable situation to boot.
69** In that same ending, take note of the Lady in Blue. She is holding Garry's rose. ''Again.''
70* The "A Painting's Demise" ending is full of it. Not only are any loved ones of Ib and Garry never going to see them again, but there's also the whole thing with Mary's attempt to leave. In order for Mary to be able to leave, someone has to take her place. In the ending "Together, Forever", this happens; Garry dies in the phantom gallery and Mary is able to leave with Ib. However, even though Garry and Ib both remain in the phantom gallery in the ending "A Painting's Demise", Mary's attempt to leave in that case ends up destroying her. Since neither Garry nor Ib were actually dead at the time, at least not yet, this indicates that it's not merely someone staying behind that's needed; someone has to actually die. What if Mary had managed to convince Ib to leave with her in the "A Painting's Demise" ending? Would Ib have had to see Mary die right before her eyes?
71** Even killing may not be enough. If the "Together, Forever" ending is any indication, it's possible that Mary also has to leave with someone from the real world to "guide" her there. Mary had the fortune of there being two people from reality in the painting world, one to kill and one to escape with... but what if she didn't and was just stuck with Garry? [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption She would've been screwed.]]
72** Of course, the worse possible option here is maybe no one had to die. Maybe Mary could be free as long as she just followed someone real out. Ib and Garry had to kill her by necessity because she was insane and trying to hurt them. If she just kept cool and walked out with them, maybe she would have been fine with no one needing to be hurt.
73*** It's unknown if this is truly the case, because Garry will refuse to leave the room and insist Ib investigate the area with Mary's painting if he's still alive. So if all three characters could have indeed survived, that means Mary was killed simply because Garry insisted they look around, and by the time they stumble upon Mary's painting, they're left with no choice but to kill her.
74** If the above theory about some of the paintings being dead people from reality is true, then this means a number of paintings and past people have made their own escape attempts, all met with failure in an intentionally endless cycle. The painting world is literally being [[PoweredByAForsakenChild Powered by Forsaken Children]]!
75* The doll room event, the toy box, and the fact that you get bad endings by being mean to the gallery hint that the artworks have a special sort of bond with each other and are at times fiercely protective of each other, and the endings "Welcome to the World of Guertena" and "A Painting's Demise" pretty well confirm it. As well, Mary considers Guertena as a father and refers to the other artworks as siblings. This makes :Mary stabbing the mannequin head during her psychotic breakdown a lot more upsetting, since she's basically hurting her own sibling. More horror kicks in when you are in the BonusDungeon. There are two paintings, one of them being "Mistake", who have had their faces scribbled out, and a couple of paintings are found in a completely dark room, hidden from sight. How do these artworks feel towards Guertena? Do they feel abandoned by him?
76* Before the 1.04 update, I had always assumed that the creepy messages that draw Ib into the gallery were left by Mary. But as we can see in A Painting's Demise, they most certainly were not. So that begs the disturbing question... who is REALLY luring innocent people into the painting world? It seems like they're doing it just for fun... Which, of course, means that Mary's death/escape probably isn't the end of it...
77** The implication is that [[GeniusLoci the gallery itself]] communicates with its victims by leaving written messages. It also seems to be serving Mary by luring innocents into the art world to replace her. Perhaps it initially started kidnapping people to give its master [[IJustWantToHaveFriends some company.]]
78* The "sinister painting" depicting Ib falling, the two potential images of hanged Ib in the Sketchbook world that only Ib can see, the fact that Ib hallucinates bunnies, which happen to be what her bedroom at home is filled with, the painting of Ib's parents, the fact that Ib dreams about memories of her birthday if she sleeps on "Final Stage"... why does the gallery tailor itself so much to Ib and seems to know things about her that it has no business knowing?
79** The Lady in Red, whom Guertena had based on some gold-digger in his life, looks very similar to Ib's mother, and some people speculated that they actually are the same woman. If that were true, the entire plot of the game would probably be the revenge gambit on part of Guertena's spirit/his creations — to get back at the girlfriend who had used him by robbing her of her child. Damn.
80** Alternately, we see these images only when playing as Ib. When the player is controlling Garry, we no longer see the hanging images of Ib or the bunnies — we see things that would cater only to Garry's fears, like the blue doll that follows him in the hallway leading to the Doll Room. It's more likely that the gallery appears different to each person who enters, and that the person witnessing it subconsciously projects their own fears and memories into the gallery, like a "blank canvas," so to speak. The reason it appears to target Ib the most is because we see the most of her perspective (due to her being the main character).
81* The gallery itself seems out to ''get'' Garry. The "Flower of Jealousy" painting splits Garry off from his companions. "Tattletale" and "Strained Ear" let Mary know that Garry has found out her secret. The dolls give Garry a lot of trouble and might drive him insane. And of course, Garry might die if you doomed him enough. Those can be attributed to Mary not liking him much. But then, Garry quickly gets his rose stolen and is almost killed when he steps into the "other" gallery. Obviously Mary had nothing to do with that one. If you kicked a mannequin, then you might get a "Hanged Garry" message and Garry starts feeling something around his neck. And right before the Abyssal Park section of the BonusDungeon, the message before it reads "Remember the artworks you hold dear".... unless you have Garry with you, in which case it says "Drown in the abyss." And it's really for certain Mary had nothing to do with that last one, because by that point she's dead.
82** [[FridgeBrilliance He's a guy.]] Almost all of the artworks are either distinctly feminine, or genderless, and the masculine ones like the Hanged Man and the Fisherman are paintings; one of them is tied to Garry himself, the other eventually ends up empty when the fisherman vacates the picture. Guertena prefers women as artistic subjects, and since the gallery is his own feeling made manifest, it may have "interpreted" Garry as a female and then reacted bitterly when it realized he wasn't.
83** Garry does use female pronouns in the Japanese version of the game, which could be the reason the gallery was confused.
84* Related to an above piece of FridgeBrilliance: it is outright stated that when the roses' petals are plucked, wounds appear on the body of the person who owns it. Yet after Garry has his rose plucked by Mary, Ib says he looks like he's sleeping. Ib hallucinates at several points as a comfort-mechanism. Just think about what Garry ''might'' have [[{{Gorn}} looked like]].
85* In the "Forgotten Portrait" ending, Garry has his lighter taken by Ib to defeat Mary, and she probably still has that lighter when she returns to the Real World. Given how quickly Garry remembers Ib when he discovers her handkerchief in his pocket in the true ending, one can only imagine how Ib will react when she finds that lighter.
86** Worse, what happens when one of her parents realizes their small daughter is carrying a lighter around? They'll probably take it away from her for safety's sake anyway, but what if they punish her just for having it, or accuse her of stealing it? It's bad enough she'll lose her keepsake, but how will it change her parents' perception of her, realizing their sad, traumatized daughter was hiding a fire-starting tool without their knowledge?
87* One of the variations of the "Ib All Alone" ending (namely, the one that is encountered when Garry and Mary die) has Ib step away from the "Fabricated World" rather than jump in. Some players are confused as to why she would do this, but consider this: she only steps back after reading the message "There's no going back. All your time here will be lost." She probably would rather stay in the gallery forever than ''forget''.
88* The ending "Promise of Reunion" is a sweet scene to end the game with, but it begs the questions: How will Ib's parents react when their small daughter wants to meet up with her friend, who is over two times her senior? What will go through their heads when they find out about this friendship? Would they even allow such a friendship to continue? ''We'' know Garry's a good person, but ''they'' don't...
89** YMMV on this one. Garry can be interpreted as rather older, from 18 to early 20's, but he CAN be also seen as around 14-16. Give or take. A common theme in MOST animated media, both Western and Eastern, is that teen/young adult protagonists are shown as looking/acting older than their actual age.
90*** Garry carries around a lighter, and its description says it’s been used for years. So it could be insinuated that Garry is/was a smoker, and the Legal age for smoking in Japan is 20. So unless we get any other reason why Garry had the lighter, it’s safe to say that Garry is at least an adult in his 20s. Though it’s also just as possible that Garry was a rebellious child/teen and illegally smoked, which is often seen in Japanese media.
91** So let's go through the list: Dyed hair. Purposefully tattered clothing, especially a "badass long coat" any teen would-be "rebel" would die for. Attempts to act/seem cooler and more collected when actually scared shitless and it's still obvious....All traits that could easily put onto a teenager and it's not odd at all. There's still an age difference but only of a few years. And Garry is obviously very nonthreatening despite his fashion choices.
92* More so FridgeSadness, but the "Forgotten Portrait" ending requires Ib to go back and grab Garry's lighter off of his corpse then use it to kill Mary, since she freaks out and attempts to kill Ib after she goes upstairs to her painting. If Ib doesn't grab the lighter or doesn't make the correct choice in burning the painting, Mary stabs her to death. But here's the thing: Ib didn't know Mary's painting was even up there, or that burning it would kill her. So Ib essentially got killed just for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time. And while we don't see the aftermath due to the game over screen, imagine how Mary must have reacted once she calmed down and realized she just murdered the first real friend she'd ever had.
93** On that topic, imagine the betrayal Mary must have felt in her last moments after seeing Ib light her painting on fire. Yes, Ib did it out of self-defense since Mary was trying to kill her, but it's shown that Mary genuinely liked and trusted Ib, and she only lashed out and tried attacking her when she went somewhere Mary didn't want her to. And assuming that Ib remembers what happened after she escapes, she'll have to live on knowing that she killed one of her friends out of necessity, while the other died to save her.
94
95[[WMG: {{Fridge Logic}}]]
96* It is never explained why there is a painting of Ib's parents in the fabricated world.
97** That might have been a hallucination on Ib's part. When she mentions it, Garry seems surprised and asks Ib if the painting really depicts her parents. After a moment of silence, he agrees with her, but worriedly notes that the gallery is affecting even a strong girl like her to such an extent.
98** It also might have been the gallery itself messing with Ib. You can find a painting of Ib falling, which the gallery presumably formed in an attempt to get to Ib.
99* It is also never explained who could have written the creepy writing in the room with the "Separation" painting.
100** Due to how flammable art can be — particularly oil paintings — and the way you end up defeating her, it is very likely that Mary wrote all over the room.
101*** That, and did you notice the red footprints lead out of the room with "Separation" and towards the hall with Mary?
102*** If you examine the mirror after that scene, there's a chance that you'll see "NO FIRE" written everywhere.
103* After Garry attempts using the lighter in the separation room, the walls and floor are covered with messages. Most read "NONONO" or "DON'T"... however, one in the corner appears to read "Don't kick me".
104** I've always read it as "Don't kill me"... 'cause, you know, Mary is afraid of fire.
105* A weird bit of GameplayAndStorySegregation. Soon after Mary joins, your party gets split up and Mary and Ib go one way while Garry goes another. Ib and Mary end up on the floor right above where Garry is, and solving the puzzles leads to them unknowingly helping each other. It gets weird when there's a picture of a painting that Ib and Mary have to enter the title of. The actual painting is on Garry's floor, but he has no way of telling them about it or even knowing that they need that information to begin with. It goes the other way too; Garry has to say when a certain painting was made. This information is found in a book that Ib and Mary read. Again, though, they're split up and they have no idea Garry's right under their feet, much less that he needs to know about the age of that juggler painting they just read about.

Top