I think you could have told The Last of Us with a pandemic that was just killing people, but that "hey I found this video of an ant dying from zombie fungus, what if that could happen to humans" was a game pitch that was accepted and they went from there
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The point is simply to be post apocalyptic and to have the idea that rebuilding is hampered by an ongoing pandemic - again, a theme I can't see as non-resonant today. And honestly the idea that that makes it somehow implicitly right wing is just bad. It's a bad idea.
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As I've mentioned, it actually allows some of the implicit racism of other types of survival stories like Westerns to be filtered out, because the "frontier" is our world that we have now, or had at a specific moment in 2013, ripped out of time forever
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I guess my point is maybe somewhat personal too in that I actually fcking hate zombies, as a genre, and yet The Last of Us 2 and 1 are my number one and two games of all time, so there's some cognitive dissonance
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I don't hate zombies for ideological reasons though and I think a lot of those critiques are better applied to specific works. I just specifically find the idea of a mindless opponent that doesn't use tactics to be extremely boring for any sort of action-adventure
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Replying to @BootlegGirl
I have come to not like the presence of the Infected in P1. They exist solely for gameplay sequences and do very little to enhance the narrative. In P2 I was on board with them, because it always dwelled with me that most Infected you kill could* have been saved if not for Joel.
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Replying to @MJAHarrison @BootlegGirl
I think the way the Cordyceps infection is painted as this truly agonizing body horror makes the whole thing a *bit* more evocative than if the story were just about a superflu that kills you normally Like it gives resonance to stuff like Tess' decision to die rather than change
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It's not *just* a theme of survival and resisting death, it's a theme of resisting *change* The Cordyceps/Homo sapiens hybrid is the new dominant species of Earth, it's replacing us, not just killing us off Which I think the Rat King in TLoU 2 is a pretty successful riff on
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The whole "We are the Walking Dead" theme thing where it directly raises the question of whether survival means anything if you don't hold onto your humanity in the process of surviving -- is Joel actually meaningfully different from a Stalker or Clicker at this point
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I think it's an interesting artistic choice that in the scene in 2 where Ellie kills Nora, it starts with Nora gasping and choking on spores and then realizing who Ellie is because she can breathe them And Ellie is breathing harder and harder before she lands the killing blow
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Ellie may be immune to physical infection, but she's been spiritually infected by this brave new world all the same
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Some people carry their mutagenic fungus on the *inside*.
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