Elden Ring has no shortage of beats that are all tremendously fun to experience with a community of players. This is still the case years after a FromSoftware Soulslike has been released, but it’s especially true of launch week, when everyone is coldly progressing through the game and coming across its oftentimes convoluted and clandestine discoveries. It’s wildly unprecedented to first descend into Elden Ring’s Siofra River Well, for example, and be taken aback by how deep underground the lift takes players before looking upon an astonishing purple sky full of stars.

Unfortunately, The Last of Us Part 2 didn’t have the chance to surprise everyone with its most devastating reveal because Joel’s death had already been leaked before launch. Still, while The Last of Us Part 2 may not be an open-world action-RPG with hundreds of hours of content (even more now thanks to its feature-length-sized Shadow of the Erdtree DLC), its character-driven story is undoubtedly packed with gut-wrenching moments, as well as one bombshell moment in particular where the size of the sequel is made shockingly apparent that Part 1 players may not have predicted.

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The Last of Us Ending with Part 2 Would Be Bold, But Not Dissatisfying

The Last of Us' future seems to balance on a knife's edge now, but that's actually no different from how both Part 1 and Part 2's stories end.

Ellie’s Seattle Journey in The Last of Us Part 2 is Long Enough to Be Its Own Game

The Last of Us Part 1 isn’t long by any stretch of the imagination and is paced fairly quickly between each of its seasonal chapters. It’s also a far simpler story, following Joel and Ellie’s cross-country trek to reach the Fireflies. Its sequel, on the other hand, tells two stories that parallel and mirror one another, requiring players to swap between Ellie and Abby. Considering how much happens between when Joel is killed by Abby and when Ellie battles Abby in Santa Barbara, it’s not at all surprising that Part 2 is at least double the length of Part 1.

Funny enough, HBO’s The Last of Us is making a point of how long and story-rich Part 2 is by splitting its adaptation of the sequel into two seasons.

Ellie’s three-day rampage throughout Seattle is quite dense with encounters against the infected (including shamblers, The Last of Us Part 2’s brand-new infected type), the Washington Liberation Front, and the Seraphites. That’s why, when Abby becomes playable again after a cut-to-black cliffhanger in the theater, Part 2 earns its Elden Ring moment.

Abby and Santa Barbara Make Up a Half and Then Some of The Last of Us Part 2

Elden Ring may only seem so large when Limgrave alone is represented on players’ maps, but being whisked away to Leyndell by a teleporter chest in the Weeping Peninsula and seeing how far away players have been taken is a sobering promise that that they have no clue how to predict the game’s sheer scale. Abby is playable in a couple of brief sequences before she kills Joel, and the fact that Ellie is then playable for the following ~10–15 hours allows her surprise deuteragonist reveal in the latter half of Part 2 to land so strongly.

Here, players not only grasp that they are back in Seattle Day 1 but that Abby has her own series of upgrade branches. This results in the revelation that there’s a whole half of the game left as there must be enough time allotted to playing as Abby in order for players to actually spend supplements on these upgrades, and they’ll be doing so during the same three days that they had just previously spent with Ellie.

The Last of Us Part 3 Can Be as Short or as Long as It Wishes

Now, it’ll be interesting to see if a possible Last of Us Part 3 chooses to be shorter like Part 1 or longer like Part 2. Regardless, its length will hopefully yet again be dictated by how straightforward or complicated its storytelling structure is.

A shorter game might not be capable of withholding and revealing its length in a startling and subverted way, but any secrets the series may be harboring would be a worthwhile hand to play since there might not be a terribly long shelf life for the franchise left. But if The Last of UsElden Ring moment has already been achieved, maybe Naughty Dog’s Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet can do so now as a novel IP with no preconceived notions.

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The Last Of Us Part II Remastered Tag Page Cover Art
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Action-Adventure
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Top Critic Avg: 89 /100 Critics Rec: 90%
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Released
January 19, 2024
ESRB
M for Mature: Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Nudity, Sexual Content, Strong Language, Use of Drugs
Developer(s)
Naughty Dog
Publisher(s)
Sony Interactive Entertainment
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WHERE TO PLAY

DIGITAL
PHYSICAL
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Engine
Proprietary Engine
Franchise
The Last of Us
PC Release Date
April 3, 2025
PS5 Release Date
January 19, 2024
Genre(s)
Action-Adventure
Platform(s)
PlayStation 5
OpenCritic Rating
Mighty
PS Plus Availability
N/A