The Last of Us Part 2 review – a gut-wrenching sequel

Can a slick, mainstream action game really reckon with the violence that drives it? The answer is yes – messily, but powerfully.

The most common joke about the difficulty video games have reconciling their storytelling impulses with the violent action so many of them depend on revolves around the character Nathan Drake. Star of the Uncharted series, Drake is famed for his easygoing, flippant charm – yet over the course of a single game he will typically kill hundreds of people. They call him the smiling psychopath.

The Last of Us Part 2 reviewDeveloper: Naughty DogPublisher: SonyPlatform: Reviewed on PS4 and PS4 ProAvailability: Exclusive to PS4, released on 19th June.

The joke must have stung the Californian Sony studio Naughty Dog, Uncharted’s maker. In 2013 they started to grapple with its implications in The Last of Us, a moody post-apocalyptic thriller that upped the graphic brutality while seeking to frame it in the context of a desperate, cruel world, and also contrast it with the delicate bond developing between the protagonist, gruff smuggler Joel, and his cargo, a teen called Ellie.

Now The Last of Us has a sequel, and in that sequel the wrestling match between the game’s violent action and its thematic intentions has developed into a full-on, bareknuckle brawl. It is, perhaps for the first time in the history of big-budget action games, a fair match. It gets messy and problematic, and neither side comes out unscathed. But, by taking some big gambles, the developers land decisive blows that will send you reeling.

Everything We Loved About The Last of Us Part 2 – The Last of Us Part 2 Review PS4 Gameplay Watch on YouTube

This isn’t even all that The Last of Us Part 2 is attempting. This is a game about women – not about the female experience , but a game in which almost all the notable characters are women and in which they are not only shown exhibiting great capability and physical prowess, but also contending with dark impulses typically ascribed to men: trauma, obsession, rage and revenge. It is also a game featuring LGBTQ+ relationships and characters in a prominent but matter-of-fact way – it’s not a big deal, they are just there.