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Joel and Ellie in The Last of Us finale
Image via HBO

‘The Last of Us’ showrunner puts a far-fetched finale rumor to bed once and for all

He squashed that speculation without hesitation.

The following article contains major spoilers for HBO’s The Last of Us in its entirety

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The Last of Us concluded its two-month, nine-episode run on HBO last week, officially and satisfactorily closing the curtains on its debut season while also leaving some threads hanging for the inevitable second installment. After Ellie took a meat cleaver to James’ neck and decimated David’s body (well-deserved, we think) in “When We Are in Need,” Joel makes a split-second, life-altering decision that means all the senseless violence and brutal killings amount to exactly nothing.

Unable to bring himself to stand idly by and let Ellie die from the cure extraction process, Joel takes matters into his own hands to save his surrogate daughter. He grabs a rifle, breaches the hospital, and makes quick work of slaughtering anyone and everyone that stands in his way — including Marlene. When a shadowy figure flees the massacre with what appears to be braided hair, The Last of Us fans assumed the survivor to be a character from Naughty Dog’s source material.

Fans thought the faceless figure to be Abby Anderson, the antagonist of The Last of Us: Part II and presumably the second season of HBO’s hit adaptation. The blink-and-you-miss-it snapshot sparked discourse on Reddit as users slowed the shot frame by frame to decipher (with nothing but a bunch of pixels) whether the “braid” was even a braid at all. Some comments thought it to be a coincidence and that the ‘braid’ was, in fact, a bag strap. Whether it was intentional or not, the camera trickery at play certainly had us going for a while there.

Apparently, the rumor of Abby’s cameo spread far enough on social media to reach Neil Druckmann, who felt the need to comment and put them to bed once and for all. On the subject of a “shadowy, seemingly braided figure” encountering Joel in the hallway, Druckmann said he would “kill that rumor” and went on to say “that is NOT Abby.” Short and sweet, albeit disappointing, but it makes sense for HBO to keep us guessing and save the big reveal for the second season, which we’re expecting to start filming as soon as the screenplay gets the go-ahead — whenever that may be.


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Author
Image of Chynna Wilkinson
Chynna Wilkinson
Chynna has been a noteworthy presence within creative media for over seven years. As a self-proclaimed geek driven by a passion for horror, comic books, video games, and modern cinema, she takes pride in doing what she loves. In addition to her personal writing projects, Chynna is also an award-winning screenwriter, published poet, and accomplished academic writer, producing everything from short stories and screenplays to articles, features, and poetry. She enjoys watching anime, horror movies, and animated shows and her life revolves around cinema, video games, and tasteful literature.