I lucked out and had a copy of God of War: Ascension laying around and popped it in. Filled with excitement, I began my download and started the game. After months of videos, screenshots and previews, I finally had the chance to try out Naughty Dog’s latest labor of love.
Anybody who’s played the Uncharted series will no doubt feel like they’re on familiar ground. Joel handles in the same way as Nathan Drake. X jumps, square melees and so on and so forth. However, that’s where the similarities end. While Drake was a super-athletic death-defying daredevil with the upper body strength of King Kong, Joel is not. And you can feel this in how he controls. They aren’t bad in any way, but the way Joel jumps over abandoned cars and pulls himself up over ledges shows he’s no Nathan Drake. Joel feels much more human and realistic, what you’d expect a man in his 40s to feel like.
We all know Naughty Dog can deliver a gorgeous and atmospheric game. What sets a game apart from others can often be in the tiniest of details. Take Lara’s growth throughout Tomb Raider for example: you can hear more confidence in her voice, see her clothes showing more wear and watch as she develops cuts and bruises. In The Last of Us, you can see the trickle of rain as it slides down unbroken windows, step in pools of water that form in corners of leaning rooms and hear the creaking and buckling of metal long left to rust. These are the things that truly transport us to these worlds, the finer details that are often overlooked in other titles.
The demo doesn’t last much longer than 15 minutes. I played through it a few times, admiring the level, playing with the crafting system – making shivs out of scissor parts – and seeing how the AI reacts to different strategies. It was an engaging, scary and downright fun experience. It ends leaving you wanting for more. Exactly what a demo should do.
Watch the Extended TV Spot:
The Last of Us releases June 14 for the PlayStation 3.
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