The Last of Us Season 2 Finale Shocker: Someone Didn't Make It
- The TV Cave Article
- May 26
- 2 min read

Warning: Spoilers for The Last of Us Season 2 finale below.
HBO’s The Last of Us continues to break new ground with its Season 2 finale, boldly shifting narrative gears in a move that mirrors the controversial storytelling twist from The Last of Us Part II video game. The season closes not just with an emotional punch, but with a new perspective—setting the stage for a drastically different Season 3.
After a brutal episode centered around Ellie’s descent into vengeance, the finale picks up with a wounded Dina recovering in the theater following a deadly Seraphite encounter. The emotional tension between Ellie and Dina escalates when Ellie reveals the trauma of torturing Nora and confesses her knowledge of Joel’s past actions in Salt Lake City. The revelations spark a quiet rift, pushing the two emotionally apart even as they cling to survival.
Jesse and Ellie set out to find Tommy, navigating a war-torn Seattle filled with Wolves and Seraphites. Their journey becomes a moral minefield, with Jesse questioning Ellie’s motivations and Ellie forced to confront the consequences of her choices. Eventually, Ellie veers off course after deciphering Nora’s cryptic clues, heading toward the aquarium where she believes Abby might be hiding.
What follows is one of the series’ most harrowing sequences yet—Ellie kills Owen and a visibly pregnant Mel, only realizing the full weight of her actions too late. It’s a devastating moment, one that leaves Ellie shaken and haunted.
The climax reaches its peak when Abby confronts Ellie at the theater. In a shocking reversal of roles, Abby becomes the one holding the gun—blaming Ellie for the death of her friends and repeating the line that’s sure to echo into Season 3:
“I let you live, and you wasted it.”
Just when viewers expect a showdown, the timeline rewinds. The final moments flash back to Seattle Day One, but this time from Abby’s perspective. As she awakens in a militarized stadium, the show officially signals a narrative shift that could define the next season—placing Abby, Joel’s killer, in the spotlight.
The Season 2 finale of The Last of Us is a masterclass in tension, emotion, and bold storytelling. By ending on a perspective change, the show challenges viewers to confront uncomfortable truths about vengeance, justice, and empathy. Season 3 is shaping up to be its most complex chapter yet.
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