- calendar_today August 20, 2025
The Last of Us Season 2 Hits Different When You’re Watching from New England
The Last of Us is back, and if you’re watching it from a cold New England couch, trust us—it’s about to hit harder, linger longer, and leave you thinking about life, loss, and everything in between.
Keywords: The Last of Us Season 2, HBO 2025, New England fans, Ellie Abby drama
So, It’s Back—and Yeah, It’s a Lot
Let’s be real. We knew this season was gonna hurt. But watching The Last of Us Season 2 while buried under three layers of fleece and waiting for the plow guy? That just makes everything sting a little more. It’s not just cold outside—it’s cold in the story too. And no, I’m not just talking about the snow.
We pick up five years later. Joel and Ellie are in Jackson, Wyoming, trying to pretend peace is a real thing. It’s not. Not here. Not anywhere. Not after everything that went down last season. You can just feel that tension brewing.
Enter Abby—And Yep, It’s Complicated
So let’s talk about her. Abby. The minute Kaitlyn Dever shows up, you know stuff’s about to blow up—emotionally, physically, all of it. And look, I’ll be honest: you might hate her. At first. Maybe longer. Or you might kinda get it. Either way, you’re gonna feel something. Which is exactly what this show wants.
She’s not alone, either. Dina and Jesse are here too—played by Isabela Merced and Young Mazino—and they bring a softness this world desperately needs. But this is The Last of Us, so… you already know that sweetness has an expiration date.
Ellie’s Changed—and So Have We
Bella Ramsey’s not playing some snarky kid anymore. This Ellie? She’s older, harder, messier. She laughs less. Hurts more. She’s got this quiet, burning grief that seeps out in the smallest moments—and then explodes when you least expect it.
And somehow, watching it all unfold in a quiet New England living room—wood stove crackling, snow tapping at the windows—it just lands deeper. Maybe it’s because we’re used to silence. Maybe it’s because we understand what it means to carry something heavy for a long time.
Everyone’s Talking—And No One’s on the Same Page
If you’ve been online lately, you’ve probably seen the arguments. Some folks are praising the writing. Some are absolutely raging over what happens in Episode 4. And in New England? We’re having our own little debates—usually with tea in hand and a lot of “yeah, but…” energy.
A few things you can expect this season:
- 9 episodes that will mess with your emotions
- 3 new characters who don’t ask for your approval—they earn it
- 1 decision that might split your heart in half
- And a whole lot of quiet moments that speak louder than gunfire
It’s Moody. It’s Quiet. It’s Kind of Perfect for Us
This season feels like New England. I know that sounds weird, but hear me out. The fog, the gray skies, the eerie stillness? That’s late January in Maine. That’s a dusk walk in Vermont where everything’s quiet but your thoughts. The show’s cinematography is basically what it feels like to drive through New Hampshire during a snowstorm.
And then there’s that soundtrack—still haunting. Still perfect. That guitar picks at you like the cold seeping in through the cracks.
Not Just a Story About the Apocalypse
It’s about people. Hurt people. Loving people. People who make awful decisions for the right reasons. And maybe that’s what’s so human about this season. It’s not trying to shock you—it’s trying to ask, what would you have done?
Joel’s secret? It’s still hanging there, heavy as hell. And every character is just trying to carry their own version of that weight.
So, Here’s the Thing…
The Last of Us Season 2 isn’t really a show you watch. It’s something you go through. It wrecks you a little. Makes you think. Maybe makes you call your sister. Or text someone you haven’t talked to in months. It’s that kind of experience.
Here in New England, we’re used to stories that make us sit with our feelings. That let the quiet do some of the talking. And this season? It’s doing just that—loud and clear.
So if you’re bundled up, emotionally prepared (or not), and ready to feel a little broken in the best possible way… hit play.
And maybe light a candle or something. You’ll need it.






