@G1ingy I'm done arguing with you. You can bend you mind to believe in the dead walking and eating the living, yet you have trouble letting a plot hole slide by. You are a sad, sad person...
@bunchanumbers How does arguing prove your point? Your logic makes no sense. You can't think of anything else bad to say about TLoU, so you resorted to bull-crap reasoning to show you have the upper ground in this argument. Pathetic.
I have yet to hear any reasons why this would make a better book than a video game.
@G1ingy Silent Hill 2 only had three enemy types and it's also critically acclaimed. Your argument is invalid.
As for your other COMPLAINT, I could CARE LESS. I mean, that could be true. I don't know. I'd have to Google it. But that really doesn't render the game as awful. And for some reason I doubt that what you said is true.
@bunchanumbers Joel never encourages Tess to go into danger. He was the one who wanted to abandon the mission and return to the safe zone. And when she was about to die he wanted to do something to help her, but she demanded him to leave her and finish the mission which HE didn't want to do. Did you even play the game?
He probably felt remorse when he first began killing them, but after years of living in the harsh world with bad people around every corner, one would assume he got used to it. In this type of world, it's kill or be killed.
@bunchanumbers Last I checked, hundreds of people is 'a lot' of people. He wanted to keep Ellie alive because she was one of the few people he liked in a harsh apocalyptic world and he had developed a father-daughter type relation with her which made her appear as his daughter in his eyes.
And about all the killing. How is he a sociopath? He defended himself from hundreds of awful people that attacked him first and probably committed acts similar to Joel's or worse.
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