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Bonds Forged in Difficult Times: The Making of The Last of Us

Game director Bruce Straley and creative director Neil Druckmann reflect on the inspirations, ambitions, and struggles of The Last of Us.

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SPOILER WARNING:This piece discusses the story and ending of The Last of Us in some detail.

There comes a time when we need to move on, leaving behind the familiar, taking a risk on something new. For Naughty Dog, the swashbuckling adventures of the Uncharted games were hugely successful. But in order to continue growing creatively, the people of Naughty Dog knew they needed to leave behind the dashing Nathan Drake and his globe-hopping, treasure-hunting escapades at some point, and create something altogether new. I recently spoke to Neil Druckmann and Bruce Straley of Naughty Dog about the long and difficult process of creating The Last of Us, from its earliest inspirations to its final moments in production.

Charting a Course to a New Country

"Coming out of No Country for Old Men and seeing the most intense gunfight I've ever seen, where three shots are fired and there's no music and it's not this big crescendo, and walking out, mouth agape, like, 'Okay, I've never played that in a video game before.'" I've just asked Bruce Straley about how the concept for The Last of Us came about. "And then, looking at the survival genre, [Neil and I] read a book called City of Thieves by David Benioff, and it's kind of a horrifying landscape but a beautiful character tale. These two men sort of discover who they are through their relationship in a nightmarish World War II scenario where there's a lot going on around them. But, it's almost like because of that world that allowed these characters to delve into--like, the contrast between the friendship and the bond and the trust that they can build up, not quite despite but almost because of the darkness of the world that they're in."

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So in City of Thieves' tale of a bond being formed in a brutal world, we can see the seeds of The Last of Us' narrative, and in No Country for Old Men's depiction of violence, where every bullet has tremendous impact and the loss of life is presented not as action-packed spectacle but as harrowing reality, we can see the seeds of its gameplay.

The Big Picture

But what about the specter of Uncharted, the tremendous success of which would undoubtedly color perceptions of whatever Naughty Dog decided to do next? Said Straley, "We didn't want to make Uncharted, you know what I mean? You can't just make another Uncharted as a new IP. You can't just make another adventure game. And that game owns the action adventure genre. There's no other game, I think, that can look at what we've done at Naughty Dog with Uncharted and compete. We don't want to compete with that. We had to kind of move into a different genre, and so it came down to, the survival genre allowed us to explore characters and interesting contrasts… it just made sense to us."

"That tension that Bruce and I felt when we saw No Country for Old Men. How do you translate that into mechanics, into systems?"
I asked them how they felt about those who don't feel like The Last of Us is a significant evolution for Naughty Dog, those who have dismissively referred to The Last of Us with phrases like "Uncharted with zombies." Neil Druckmann talked about what he sees as the crucial differences between The Last of Us and the studio's previous franchise. "On the simplest level, Uncharted is about putting you in a summer blockbuster film. It's about that power fantasy, and just kinda having fun in that combat space. But with The Last of Us, what we want to do is just create a sense of tension. That tension that Bruce and I felt when we saw No Country for Old Men. How do you translate that into mechanics, into systems? And yeah, obviously we worked on Uncharted, so there's a lot of leveraging of what we learned on Uncharted, but there's a lot of stuff that just didn't work for us in this game, like the regenerating health. To create the kind of tension we needed, we needed persistent health. Likewise, stealth, and AI. We needed the enemies to be able to communicate with one another, be able to flank you, and then freak out when they can't find where their friend went. And that required a whole new AI system. So while on the surface, they might appear similar, it's actually what's happening underneath, and I would say the experience of actually playing it, feels vastly different."

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Straley talked a bit about the pressure of living up to the tremendous expectations people had for Naughty Dog's next venture while attempting to do something they'd never done before. "It's the hardest thing to know that you have the pedigree of Uncharted to live up to, and we have that kind of pressure on us to create a new IP that, when we first announced, it was the best announcement we've had in Naughty Dog history. People were hooked, instantly, like, 'I want to know more about this stuff.' And Neil and I are over here shitting our pants and going, 'We don't know if this is gonna work!' We're going with the most systemically-based core systems that Naughty Dog's ever created inside of a game, butted up against one of the most heavily story-driven and character-driven games that we've ever made."

"And taking those two things is not an easy task and you just iterate and you flounder and I cry on Neil's shoulder at lunch, and he consoles me, and we go back and we try something else, and that fails, and it's like you blow things up, and you find this little nugget that you hang on to, and you wipe away the ashes, and you hold on to that nugget and you try again. It's a hard process to be in for three-and-a-half years, and it doesn't really come together until the audio. The music comes in, the performances from Troy and Ashley which were amazing started coming in, the lighting starts coming together, and the AI, which is the thing we started on first came in the very last. Somebody had to rip it out of our hands to go, 'OK, you guys are done.' But we're not done. And that's how you ship a game."

Finding the Gameplay, Finding the Characters

"Just from a design standpoint, we knew we didn't want to create an escort mission, and that's exactly what we were on the road to doing."
Of course, we hadn't yet even touched upon one of the most important aspects of The Last of Us: its narrative, and the vividly realized, memorable characters who populate its world. But as it turns out, the development of the story and the development of the game mechanics were closely intertwined. I asked if the story was nailed down before production began, or if it evolved as the game was being put together. Druckmann said, "Unlike a film where you can kind of pre-plan everything before you go into production, there's no blueprint for fun. You don't know what mechanics are going to work or not work because you're doing something that hasn't been done before. So for example, one of the original ideas was, Ellie would never shoot a non-Infected person until the very end of the game when she would save Joel. That was one of the early iterations we had for her arc. And pretty soon we realized it didn't feel honest for a character living in this world to not be involved in the combat. And just from a design standpoint, we knew we didn't want to create an escort mission, and that's exactly what we were on the road to doing."

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"So all of a sudden, we're a little bit into production and we're starting to capture our first scene and we realize this is not gonna work. Now you have to rethink the entire structure of your story. Not just a scene or a line of dialogue but just where the story's gonna go. So we went back to the drawing board and rethought the arcs and said, 'OK, what if Ellie is capable from the beginning? Where does that take us?' This is a dual-protagonist story. We felt that both characters needed to change by the end of it. So we're constantly making these revisions based on gameplay needs, and we don't know what they are ahead of time. So throughout production, we're shifting things, and sometimes the story dictated certain aspects or a certain tone we're after. We had a lot more classes of Infected, some of which were much more fantastical, and we felt like we were getting away from the tone of the story so we started reeling some of that stuff back as well. So even though things were fun, they didn't fit with the story so there's this constant conversation that's happening between story and gameplay where things shift throughout."

The Importance of Contrast

There are numerous vital characters in The Last of Us, though, who don't figure into the game's combat or other mechanics. Clearly a lot of the work in finding these characters and structuring the story happened independently of designing the gameplay. I told them that, for me, even though some of the supporting characters don't get a great deal of screen time, they all made a powerful impression, in a way that characters in games seldom do. I asked them about their approach to creating these supporting characters and figuring out their roles in the story. Druckmann said, "The more you make players engage with the supporting cast, the more you make Ellie and Joel ultimately shine. Even for the enemies, as well. David and others you fight. The more you felt that those characters were human, the more you could relate to who Joel and Ellie are as characters and the struggles they have to go through."

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"When Bruce and I first laid out the outline for this thing, each section is broken down into environment and what kind of antagonism you're gonna face in that environment. But there's also: Where are Joel and Ellie in their relationship? And then who can they run into in this sort of short story in each location that will reflect back something that they're struggling with, or a cautionary tale about their relationship and what could happen to it. So when you think about someone like Bill, he kinda spells it out for Joel. The reason we put him there is so that he can voice Joel's concerns. So Joel is thinking at that point, 'I really don't want to take responsibility for this kid. I'm putting my life at risk.' But he can't say that because that won't feel natural. So the reason to have Bill there is that Bill can actually say that to Joel, and warn Joel about that stuff."

"At some climactic point, the roles would flip, and a character you don't normally see in a video game, a 14-year-old girl, would become the protector, both in story and in gameplay."
"But if you just stay there," Druckmann contiuned, "you have a pretty flat character. So Bill has reached a point in his life where he's like, 'I don't want to be attached to anyone, and that's how I'm gonna survive, because when you get attached to people, then you make mistakes, and you let your emotions get in the way.' And then it's like, OK, what will make this character more interesting is if that was actually a contradiction of his character, and he actually is yearning to be with someone despite what he says on the surface. In storytelling, that's kinda like this basic concept. The more interesting contrast and contradiction somebody has in their character, the more depth that they have. So then we got the idea that he had a partner named Frank, and he really cared for that relationship, and you find out that he didn't even leave Frank; Frank left him. So you start on a very, kind of superficial level and you try to see how deep you can go with the limited time you have with the character."

The Protector

In many ways, Joel is a pretty typical video game protagonist. He knows how to handle a gun. He knows how to beat a man senseless. But at a certain point, The Last of Us takes you out of Joel's shoes and puts you in the role of Ellie. Playing as a 14-year-old girl is certainly not typical in big-budget action games. I asked them why they didn't just take the more traditional route of having players experience the entire story from Joel's perspective. Druckmann said, "We knew we wanted to tell this story where you have a more traditional protector that you would in a video game and then see how we could kind of flip that on its head. At some climactic point, the roles would flip, and a character you don't normally see in a video game, a 14-year-old girl, would become the protector, both in story and in gameplay."

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"We're making a video game. You can connect with a character on a different level when you're playing as them that you can't in a passive medium like a film or a book. When you're out there in the snow, and I'm describing my own feelings, but I'm playing as Ellie, I am Ellie. I am hunting. I am worried about Joel. It lets me see Joel, too, from a different perspective, in some ways objectify him or vilify him. I can view him and start thinking about him differently when I'm not playing as him. And we really wanted to leverage those feelings."

This is Where it Ends

The Last of Us has one of the most unconventional and ambiguous endings ever seen in such a high-profile game. I asked about how the choice to end the game in such a way came about. "Initially," Druckmann said, "the ending was, I guess, a little bit more of a hopeful note. It was gonna be Joel and Ellie riding towards Maria's town and Ellie believed Joel's lie and, y'know, things are gonna be all right with these two. And the camera pans up as you see them walking towards [the town] and the credits would roll over that view of the town. And it didn't feel honest. One is, Ellie's much smarter than that, so there's no way that she would just wholesale buy that whole lie, and two is like, it's not a simple right or wrong decision, when you back up into what Joel does."

"The story is just about those final choices and the final choice is Ellie's. How does she deal with that lie? It's open to interpretation, and we really loved that."
But there was some resistance to ending the game more ambiguously. Druckmann continued, "So we went down this road of doing this whole other ending that's much more open-ended, end on this lie, and we started focus testing. And people hate the ending. For a long time, they want a more satisfying ending. They want Bloaters to show up at the lab and to have this big epic fight as the thing is burning down, and they want closure. They don't necessarily want it to be happy, but they're saying, 'I wish Ellie shot Joel at the end,' or something more definitive. 'You should let it roll for a bit longer so I could see what happened in the town, so I'd know what happened to these characters.' And it didn't feel like we needed to answer that, because the story is just about those final choices and the final choice is Ellie's. How does she deal with that lie? It's open to interpretation, and we really loved that."

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"And the more the music started coming together, the more the gameplay for the hospital started to come together, we saw that shift of people starting to turn around, and all of a sudden in the focus test room, there'd be that one voice of someone arguing for the ending, saying how much they enjoyed it. And that gave us a glimmer of hope, so we stuck to our guns. We stuck to what felt right to us."

Having been involved in a few impassioned discussions myself about the morality of Joel's actions toward the end of the game, I asked Druckmann about the reactions that he's seen. "It's interesting," he said. "For parents, for anyone I know that's a parent that has played the game, it's 100 percent, they agree with Joel. 'I would do what he did.' For non-parents, it's about 50-50. They might still enjoy it and they might still get it, but they see Joel as a monster, a selfish monster. And for us, our intentions, it's more complicated than that. You could see that Marlene is a monster in some way, that she's willing to kill a kid for something. It's like, is that any better than what Joel does? You could argue that everybody is selfish in this story, or everybody is altruistic. It just kind of depends on your point of view."

The Things You Can Live With

Mechanically, the one issue I've most often seen people discuss as a flaw in The Last of Us is Ellie's tendency to periodically do things that appear as if they should alert enemies to her presence. This has been discussed in an article by Tom Bissell and lampooned in comic strips. I asked Druckmann and Straley if they saw this issue in the game as a flaw they felt they could have fixed, or if it is simply the result of current AI limitations, the sort of thing that players have to be willing to suspend their disbelief about and accept when playing a game. Straley deadpanned, "We could have fixed it, but we left it in just so people had something negative to talk about with the game."

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As the laughter subsided, he shifted into a more serious mode. "No, I think when we sat around three-and-a-half years ago, that was one of the biggest questions we all had was, 'Are we going to be able to pull off as many allies as we have throughout this story, and specifically allies working with you in stealth situations?' It probably is the biggest AI challenge, and we're trying to do it without a bunch of HUD. We specifically didn't want to have control over Ellie. We didn't want the player to instruct Ellie what to do and where to go. We needed her to be autonomous and be able to stand on her own two feet, and be a character that exists in that world, not just a robot that I'm controlling, if we're gonna make that character work.

"Time is of the essence. You run out of it. You're like, what are your priorities? What are people willing to live with?"
"We even had dialogue recorded where she was going to apologize if she broke stealth. We were going to have a small percentage chance that maybe if she bumped into a guy, or obviously walked right in front of him, that he would notice her, and then the enemies would react. And after combat, she would actually apologize. 'Sorry about that, I fucked up back there.' And it was just one of those things, that--time is of the essence. You run out of it. You're like, what are your priorities? What are people willing to live with? We just didn't have enough time in the end to solve all the problems. We have ways of solving it. It was just, simply, time ran out. But we have a good foundation, so keep building."

"And the thing is," Druckmann said, "I think it stands out even more because of how good the AI is when it doesn't break. So there's all this stuff that's happening dynamically. The enemies are communicating with one another. They're flanking systemically. When one is gone, they comment about it. Ellie can dynamically stab a guy in the back and save you. These are all systems, and again, for us it's the most systemic game we've ever made, and it got to a point where it's like, OK, do we just let you control Ellie like Bruce was saying, and lose all those moments potentially? Do we design this setup where she's just gonna hang back the whole time? And again, you'd lose that dynamic way of bonding with Ellie. And for us it felt like the lesser--we knew we were gonna get knocked for it. But it felt like, with everything else the AI is doing right, it feels like the correct way to go, and the way to push these things forward and raise the bar in a lot of areas, even though this one thing is gonna stand out."

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Ultimately, an impulse to push things forward and raise the bar in big-budget, mainstream action adventure games seems to have been the guiding principle of The Last of Us. Its action is distinctly different from that of other games in the genre, and its story, with its complex characters and its ambiguous ending, is much richer than your typical action-adventure game narrative. The pressure was immense, but the end product did not disappoint. The only problem now for the people of Naughty Dog is that, by creating something so impressive, they've once again generated huge expectations for whatever they do next. But that's a pretty good problem to have, as far as problems go.

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raiden7860

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it was a great game i think now at days games like this are rare metal gear solid is one of the only game series like this


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Warlord_Irochi

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@Winterstreet Said the guy throwing average useless insults instead of putting a proper answer.

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Leefx

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The Last of Us was amazing, people complaining about the length? come on 18-20hrs is pretty damn good for a campaign nowadays, there isn't many others that can match this or at least not in this genre, obviously sand box games are massive, and yes there have been many amazing titles on 360 and PS3 over the years, to compare a game like FC3 to TLOU is just daft as they are both great in their own way and near the top of their class in there genres. For me though TLOU is the best current gen experience I have played easily, the production is flawless apart from the minor glitches mentioned in the article above, the graphics were absolutely spot on, the game mechanics were about as good as you can get them, (I can't remember better on a console) everything was reactive and positive, the story is one that appeals to me and the voice acting was the best I can remember with a script that flows like it was written in a Hollywood studio, we see glimpses of these factors all the time in various games but to bring them ALL together in one experience is what Naughty Dog did, and me? I take my hat off to you guys for creating a game that I will never forget, like now 16yrs down the line I will never forget playing FFVII 16 years from now I'm sure I will still be saying remember 'the Last Of Us', thank you Naughty Dog and Please Please Please make a sequel!

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Sscool88

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I feel amaze by this game, my 1st thought is i think this game will be the same like another adventure game, but then after i try the game, i know this was something more than just an adventure game. My only concern is the play hours of the game. I finish the game in 20hrs on normal mode. Maybe i only need 15-16 hours on my 2nd play. It would be perfect if this game have a longer story and some side quest. Overall i give 9 out of 10. I really appreciate naughty dog for making such a great game. Been a fan of RE for a long time and have to say cannot compare any RE game to last of us. Great job guys.

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icewindy

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9.5 out of 10 game

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Warlord_Irochi

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@icewindy If you like a game then you should not care about a number on a website.

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TimmyP777

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What is so great about this game?! Please tell me!

GAH. I mean it was good, but Far Cry 3 was better, Tomb Raider was better, hell Bioshock was better and I hated the first 2. Wanna play a true masterpiece? Fire up the dolphin emulator and load up Xenoblade in HD!

TLOU was soooo average.

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Warlord_Irochi

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@TimmyP777 You did not like it, that's it. Objectively you can't deny it'0s achievements.

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Mabrry

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@TimmyP777 TLOU had great storytelling and graphics, with characters you actually care about and solid, satisfying gameplay. Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed TR and Far Cry 3. But both of those games had characters I could care less about. Lara's girlfriend was absolutely annoying and the characters facial expressions in that game were a joke. Far Cry 3 was really fun but as cooolio mentioned, the story was ok and nothing incredible. This is simply my opinion however, I loved all the games mentioned but I definitely feel that TLOU is not an average game.

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cooolio

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@TimmyP777 It just was not for you. I think you might like a lot of action, or maybe the gameplay dd not appeal to you. I for one think that Far Cry 3 pales in comparison to this game mainly because Far Cry 3's story was average, and because i think that its greatness and praise was based solely on its open world and stealth mechanics.

In my opinion, if you were only able to just point and shoot, it would just be an open world FPS.

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jayjay444

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Aww I thought this was going to be a video of behind the scenes good article none the less.

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Warlord_Irochi

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@jayjay444 I think they uploaded the making off a few days back.

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Gamer_4_Fun

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It is just amazing how much The Last of Us is the polar opposite of Uncharted series.

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Warlord_Irochi

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@Gamer_4_Fun What do you mean? :?

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ElFlechero

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The Last of Us was an incredible game. I hope to see many games inspired by it--many different kinds of games. This was a dark, violent, real feeling, incredibly polished game with a powerful story. Hopefully developers will take the right lessons from it; hopefully they'll make more real feeling, incredibly polished games with powerful stories of all kinds, and not just more dark, violent games. We'll see.

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clr84651

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Very good article & game!

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TheBlackSpeed

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A masterpiece of a game that I was fortunate enough to play. I can not wait to see what single player DLC lies ahead.

And for anyone saying this was "Uncharted with zombies" or "lackluster", you guys have either been playing your generic shooters too long or don't inherently have the respect and appreciation needed to play an amazing game such as this.

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Def-Trex

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@TheBlackSpeed The gameplay was not so good.I loved the story, but yeah the gameplay was pretty crappy.

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TheBlackSpeed

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Edited By TheBlackSpeed

@Def-Trex @TheBlackSpeed Minor inconsistencies in a gaming world vastly full of crappy gameplay and generic story. This comes out, quality on a much higher tier than we're used to, and people still want to find fault. It's pitiful.

I agree on a minor, minor level, but it's nothing that was substantial to ruin any experience one can have while playing.

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TheBlackSpeed

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@Def-Trex @TheBlackSpeed To each his own and I respect your summary. At least you found some enjoyment out of it and not putting it in the same category as other garbage games. :)

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Def-Trex

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@TheBlackSpeed @Def-Trex I liked the game thought the writing and cinematics were some of the best I have ever seen.I just found the gameplay to be kind of boring.Half of it is just walking around giving your partner a boost and the other half was a semi broken stealth game with poor shooting and terrible enemy AI.Worth playing for the story though it was great.

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Warful

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@Def-Trex @TheBlackSpeed How so was it crappy? the only thing I can find, is the cover system was at times a bit annoying as it wasn't like the Uncharted toggle-cover, but else it was pretty damn solid.

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frozengrudge

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I'm looking forward to the Single Player dlc. I hope it's about Tess and Joel's adventures prior to TLOU's events that took place 20 years after the outbreak.

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Claudiov1_0

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Great article once again Carolyn, keep up the good work!

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carolynmichelle

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@Claudiov1_0 Thanks very much!

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Claudiov1_0

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Im still waiting to buy this game and play it, seems like a pretty good ride... i've just played trought Bioshock Infinite and the Last of Us will have a really hard time overcoming that!

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Warful

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@Claudiov1_0 Agreed, but TLOU will no doubt get under your skin in ways Infinite can't. Those two games shouldn't ever be compared, cause they are perfect and unique in their very own ways!

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Ilikeapples45

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Yet another article about the over hyped mess this game was. I didn't know having a passable story (good for a game, average in any other form of media) made up for the "clunkiness" and the lack of innovation in game play.

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Warlord_Irochi

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@Ilikeapples45 Yet another useless coment from a person that, seeing how he hates this game, should not even have clicked into the article.

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G4m3r0uTL4wZ

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Edited By G4m3r0uTL4wZ

@Ilikeapples45 Yeah cause anyone can survive through a complete winter laying on a floor under a sheet with no drugs/medics after getting impaled by a iron rod then suddenly wake up healthy and manage to save the world. This interactive movie trash is a complete joke both for its utterly dull and generic,casual gameplay and its shitty cliche story.


oops...spoiler.

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RacoonEater

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Edited By RacoonEater

@G4m3r0uTL4wZ You probably don't watch movies either, do you? I was about to tell you "kill yourself" but you sound like a child. Play more games, watch movies, enjoy life that will diminish the hate inside you.

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frozengrudge

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linear*

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frozengrudge

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Edited By frozengrudge

@G4m3r0uTL4wZ @frozengrudge @Ilikeapples45 Simmer down there dude. You always have an option not to play non linear games such as this one. PROBLEM SOLVED. or bettter yet, STOP playing games if all you do is complain about the games that you play. AT LEAST refrain from using really irritatingly NASTY language if you're going to criticize a game.

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G4m3r0uTL4wZ

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Edited By G4m3r0uTL4wZ

@frozengrudge @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @Ilikeapples45 Je critique parce que je souhaite voir le monde se réveiller et réaliser que ce genre de ''jeu'' n'a pas sa place en tant qu'un jeu mais plus comme un film.Beaucoup trop d'entres-eux comme: Re6, Bioshock,le nouveau Tomb Raider et ce jeu ci en particulier suivent et on pris cette voi. Un jeu qu'y n'offre rien d'autre qu'une histoire linéaire,ou le gameplay semble être forcé (et très médiocre) pour faire croire au joueur que ses actions menent quelque part quand tout le monde sait que peu importe ce que tu fais,les developeurs veulent juste que tu avances du point A au point B pour enclancher la prochaine cutscene et arriver a la fin de l'histoire. Beaucoup trop de jeux de nos jours qu'y se considèrent jeu d'aventure/survival ou peu-importe sont,dans le fond,très limité et plutôt axé sur le fait d'avoir un partenaire A.I qu'y nous suit partout pour facilement inclure plus de dialogues, contenus dans l'histoire et rendre le jeu encore plus focusé sur celle-ci et a devenir un film,que de rester ce qu'y consiste un vrai bon jeu,le gameplay. Look at RE6, what a disgrace. Why does it fail so bad? The game tries too hard at being way too realistic and a movie with all those QTEs,cutscenes,forced A.I partners, moving across the whole globe forces a game to stay linear and shallow as hell. Judging from its score,thats not what people want from a damn game,so why praise such generic,copy/pasted trash as Last of Us or the new Tomb raider?? Theyre all the same garbage under a different skin and color palette. But a different story....ohhhh shiny story.

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frozengrudge

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@G4m3r0uTL4wZ @Ilikeapples45 mais je ne comprends pas pourqoui vous parlez si mal du TLOU. A mon avis Il ne faut pas utiliser trop de gros mots juste pour critiquer un jeux que vous n'aimez pas sinon on va vous prendre pour un idiot.

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G4m3r0uTL4wZ

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Edited By G4m3r0uTL4wZ

@Ilikeapples45 By the way, Im french-canadian from quebec and english is only my 2nd language, even if I named book titles you wouldnt know what Im talking 'bout and thats the reason my english is far from perfect.

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G4m3r0uTL4wZ

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Edited By G4m3r0uTL4wZ

@frozengrudge @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater RTSes like Wc3, Strategy games like Heroes:M&M, BF3, Demons/Dark souls, Dragons crown, Dragons Dogma: Dark arisen Chivalry: Medieval warfare, Also currently playing Bastion and Trine 2, I like the TWD point and click game,God of war,Super smash Bros, waiting for South Park: Stick of Truth and I love some good classics like he told REs(anything pre-4), Fatal Frame2, BaLdurs Gate,Super mario RPG:Legend of the 7 stars man Ive just played soooooooooooooo many games I cant name them all.....

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Ilikeapples45

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@frozengrudge @Ilikeapples45 @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater No, to the idiot. Sorry bout that.

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frozengrudge

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@Ilikeapples45 @frozengrudge @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater Oh i'm sorry i thought you were referring to me @Ilikeapples45

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frozengrudge

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@Ilikeapples45 @frozengrudge @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater haha i read lots of Stephen King sci-fi and horror books. I also read zweig's oeuvres. I read a lot of books. I'm a bookworm aside from being a gamer.

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Ilikeapples45

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Edited By Ilikeapples45

@frozengrudge @G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater What books do you read @G4m3r0uTL4wZ?

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frozengrudge

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@G4m3r0uTL4wZ @RacoonEater dude what type of games do you play?

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G4m3r0uTL4wZ

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@RacoonEater @G4m3r0uTL4wZ How ironic since everyones always asking why do I always have a smile on my face, I actually play TONS of games,and know what a GAME is,something this POS is not.

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slimskelter

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Edited By slimskelter

No doubt this was a well executed game, but there wasn't anything authentic or original about it. It was just a mash up of every post-apocalyptic story that the media has been spewing out for the last 10-15 years. It makes me think that the folks who are calling this game revolutionary or who are acting as if it is are 15 year olds. That being said, I would've given the game an 8-9 because it was well crafted mechanically.

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cooolio

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@slimskelter You actually sum up my view of the game in terms its execution and how well it was crafted. I understand what you mean about the story, but i think that the story brings originality by how it tells the story and the fact that you can do little things like choose to have optional conversations or find collectibles to do the former also. To me that all adds depth to the story, but i admire your evaluation on its execution.

I think that what makes a game revolutionary is how it executes new or old mechanics, how to uses them in its on unique way, and how all the its parts come together.

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