We also get a flashback of her saving Sunny from drowning, and tearfully hugging him afterward.
![omori emotions omori emotions](https://assets.vg247.com/current/2021/05/Omori-emotions-chart-neutral-emotions.jpg)
Everyone in her friend group goes for Never Speak Ill of the Dead, with everyone saying that she was a wonderful cook, generous with her time and things, and compassionate towards her loved ones. Mari herself also invites this, given she's a Posthumous Character.He pushed her defensively to get away from her, just like Aubrey pushed Basil at the lake. Sunny wanted to run away from the confrontation as he always does, but Mari stepped in front of him and said she wasn't done talking to him yet. Mari confronted Sunny at the top of the stairs about it afterwards. The Truth Album Transcript found in the game's files tells the story of this: Sunny was so frustrated from playing the song over and over again, he felt like he was making more mistakes every time he attempted it, and his fingers hurt so bad, he threw the violin down the stairs in a fit of rage.Mari could have also asked why the heck he smashed the gift from their friends, in an OOC Is Serious Business moment. It could have been Mari being worried about Sunny's wellbeing, with Sunny lashing out in frustration. The game does not elaborate on what Mari and Sunny argued about the day that he smashed the expensive violin that his friends had bought for him.It's a question of Aubrey caring either too much or too little. We see some evidence that both are right, though Aubrey admits she attacked Basil because she mistakenly thought he had removed Mari's pictures from the photo album. Hero says she wouldn't forget about her childhood friends just because of a traumatic incident. Kel believes that Aubrey has changed too much and no longer cares about her friends, given she nearly drowned Basil. Real Kel and Hero argue about this regarding Aubrey.Something's status as the Big Bad into question-does it represent the trauma itself, or, rather, the need for the trauma to be addressed?.If Omori represents harmful ignorance, Something could be considered a form of Brutal Honesty.
![omori emotions omori emotions](https://i.redd.it/l4zwti3t2df61.png)
While it certainly is creepy and has no problem peppering Headspace with jumpscares, ultimately most of its interactions with Sunny and Omori are centered around the truth of Mari's death, something the former has to acknowledge to reach the good ending and something the latter deliberately obfuscates.
![omori emotions omori emotions](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/58/3c/05/583c054e1cde361485e2f44f068e8331.jpg)
Are they actually friends, or does Omori actually hate the guy? The game lore reveals that Omori has reset Headspace multiple times to keep Sunny from learning the truth and each reset reunites Basil with the friend group in a case of irony, the real Basil helped cover up the Truth while Dream Basil keeps wanting to talk about it, having remembered that Mari died. There is also the question of Omori's relationship with Dream Basil.Perhaps he wanted confirmation that Sunny no longer needed him.
![omori emotions omori emotions](https://gamedom.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/How-Do-Emotions-Work-In-Omori-350x350.jpg)
Is he really just a figment of Sunny's imagination relaying his own suicidal thoughts back to himself, or has he become something more ( or already was)? When Sunny vandalizes the Photo Album or pretends that certain doors don't exist, is it his repression happening in realtime, or is Omori influencing how Sunny perceives reality? There is also the bit that in the good ending, Omori kills Sunny.but when Sunny persists anyway when you click "Yes" on given the option to continue, Omori gives him a Cooldown Hug, drops the knife, and fades away. Even as the game ends, it's not clear where Sunny ends and Omori begins. The title character himself is likely the biggest example of this in the game.