Get Married Wiki — Tomie Wants To

A rare ending where the player successfully marries Tomie, though the subtext implies a life of eternal, terrifying servitude.

When Tomie expresses a desire to marry, the following elements typically appear:

As you spend time with Tomie, your character’s sanity decays. tomie wants to get married wiki

The agency director, Mr. Hikage, is instantly enchanted. When Tomie rejects his advances, he suffers a psychotic break and attempts to push her in front of a train. She regenerates from a single eyelash, and Mr. Hikage disappears under mysterious circumstances (implied to have been fed to Tomie’s "other selves").

A: No. It is an original screenplay written by Izumi Takahashi. A rare ending where the player successfully marries

– In this variation, Tomie's severed body parts grow into new versions of herself, each demanding exclusive "marriage" from the men who possess them, leading to chaotic polygamous violence.

More recently, the title has been associated with a fan-made titled Tomie Wants To Get Married Hikage, is instantly enchanted

The "wiki" that catalogs Tomie’s numerous appearances—in chapters like "Photograph," "Mansion," and "Revenge"—consistently subverts the romantic ideal of matrimony. When Tomie insinuates herself into a man’s life, speaking of elopement or eternal commitment, she is not seeking a partner but a victim. She plays on the male ego, offering herself as an object of possession. The men who fall for her trap are not innocent; they are archetypes of toxic masculinity—the possessive teacher, the jealous lover, the vain artist. Tomie does not corrupt them; she merely amplifies the violent potential already latent in their desire to own and control a woman. Thus, "getting married" becomes a metaphor for a man’s attempt to cage the uncageable. And when he inevitably fails, he reaches for the knife.

A rare ending where the player successfully marries Tomie, though the subtext implies a life of eternal, terrifying servitude.

When Tomie expresses a desire to marry, the following elements typically appear:

As you spend time with Tomie, your character’s sanity decays.

The agency director, Mr. Hikage, is instantly enchanted. When Tomie rejects his advances, he suffers a psychotic break and attempts to push her in front of a train. She regenerates from a single eyelash, and Mr. Hikage disappears under mysterious circumstances (implied to have been fed to Tomie’s "other selves").

A: No. It is an original screenplay written by Izumi Takahashi.

– In this variation, Tomie's severed body parts grow into new versions of herself, each demanding exclusive "marriage" from the men who possess them, leading to chaotic polygamous violence.

More recently, the title has been associated with a fan-made titled Tomie Wants To Get Married

The "wiki" that catalogs Tomie’s numerous appearances—in chapters like "Photograph," "Mansion," and "Revenge"—consistently subverts the romantic ideal of matrimony. When Tomie insinuates herself into a man’s life, speaking of elopement or eternal commitment, she is not seeking a partner but a victim. She plays on the male ego, offering herself as an object of possession. The men who fall for her trap are not innocent; they are archetypes of toxic masculinity—the possessive teacher, the jealous lover, the vain artist. Tomie does not corrupt them; she merely amplifies the violent potential already latent in their desire to own and control a woman. Thus, "getting married" becomes a metaphor for a man’s attempt to cage the uncageable. And when he inevitably fails, he reaches for the knife.

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