Ellie’s outburst in The Last of Us Season 2 has fans flinching harder than a clicker jump scare, and it might be HBO’s sneakiest setup yet.
There are three things you don’t do during the apocalypse: run out of duct tape, trust someone named Todd, and announce your secret immunity to a zombie plague like you’re ordering coffee. And yet, in the latest episode of The Last of Us Season 2, Ellie goes full Broadway and belts out the spoiler of the century. Yeah. That’s where we are.
Ellie has a moment that had fans collectively clutching their gamer pearls. She shouts about her immunity in the wide open, and we’re all just sitting here like, “Ma’am, is there a volume knob on you somewhere?”
Bella Ramsey as Ellie in The Last of Us Season 2 | Credits: HBO
Now, we love Bella Ramsey. We know she’s doing the best she can with what the writers give her. But fans who’ve spent a decade stealthing through the game are having a moment. And it’s loud. Pun intended.
The Last of Us forgot its own rules of survival
Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey in The Last of Us | Credits: HBO
In the game, Ellie is smart. Witty. Paranoid. She knows the value of keeping secrets. Especially this one. Her bite is covered by a tattoo for a reason. It’s not just an edgy aesthetic choice; it’s camouflage. It’s the post-apocalyptic version of turning off location services. So why, oh why, would she yell her immunity status to the trees? Is there a secret clicker tribunal in the forest waiting to file a report?
One Redditor summed it up best: “The worst part for me was the ‘I’m immune’ part. That was very weird. Game Ellie knew the importance of not talking about it.” Another added: “The tattoo being her weird sort of cover for the bite is also odd.” And you know what? They have a point. Ellie’s immunity isn’t just a plot point; it’s the plot point. Treating it casually messes with the tension the show worked so hard to build.
It’s not just dangerous; it’s narratively clumsy. In a world where secrets can mean survival, blurting out your biggest one feels like breaking the fourth wall and yelling at the writers’ room. Fans weren’t just confused; they were pulled right out of the story.
HBO is sneakily prepping your feelings like a gut punch soufflé
Pedro Pascal in The Last of Us | Credits: HBO
Let’s not ignore the elephant in the Jackson community center. This scene may be doing more than just confusing the game’s fans. It might be subtle groundwork for Joel’s inevitable fate. Because here’s the deal: TV shows love foreshadowing. And The Last of Us loves pain. Combine the two, and what do you get? HBO is spoon-feeding us emotional calamity with a side of betrayal.
By showing Ellie being more open, less guarded, more talkative about her immunity, the show is giving us the warm fuzzies. She’s playful again. She feels safe. Joel is nearby. Life is good. Cue dramatic irony.
This makes what we all know is coming hit even harder. They’re setting us up to feel like everything’s okay before they pull the rug out. And it’s working, dang it. We’re mad about the line, yes, but we also know, deep down, it’s a sign that the happy times are numbered.
Still, some fans pointed out that it’s not entirely out of character. Ellie is still that silly, confident girl at this point in the timeline. She hasn’t experienced that gut-punch trauma yet. She’s safe with people she trusts. Maybe shouting into the void isn’t ideal, but it’s a reminder that she’s still a kid. A loud one who hasn’t had to learn the hard lesson of silence. Not yet, anyway.
The Last of Us Season 2 can be streamed on Max.