jaygrim
TheAllSeeingEye
I really don't see it being anything like uncharted.
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... During the first playthrough.
In the store at Pittsburg, Henry (the black guy who travels with his brother Sam) gets angry with his brother because he wants to take a robot toy (some kind of transformer).
Later on, we see that Ellie took it and gives it to Sam, who ditches it because he has more urgent things to manage by then.
Well, on my second playthrough, I noticed that Henry and Sam left the toy store, and the robot was on the floor. Then I saw that Ellie went nearby the robot and stood there. I thought "wow, she will take it!".
But no, she doesn't. At least while you are looking at her! Then I looked elsewhere, turning my back to it and leaving the store. I quickly turned back again but by then Ellie was already walking outside the store and the robot was gone.
So, Ellie waits for no one to see it then she takes the robot. What an incredible attention to detail!
As many of you say, there are a lot of details that make the Joel-Ellie story shine so big. It's all those things she says here and there in the different locations, her comments to your actions, etc...
For all those things and the way they create that bond, slowly, through contextual things, this is a masterpiece. And it is because it's all subtle, you can miss a lot of things that on your second playthrough make you think "this people are sick, they have developed that?". This robot thing is an example of it.
I think Ellie knew Joel was lying
I think she did too. You can also take Joel's decision to lie to her as a self-motivated decision, or one to try and give Ellie a better, guilt free life. He basically saved her when there was no guarantee her sacrifice would have worked in terms of finding a vaccine, but I think that Ellie wouldn't see it that way.
The clever part of the ending is that despite Joel seeming selfish in keeping her alive almost as a replacement for his daughter, his lie was him acting like a parent, and I think Ellie is okay with his lie because she sees that too.
Uncharted, not Unchartered
It's not a game series about accountants gone rogue.
I think she did too. You can also take Joel's decision to lie to her as a self-motivated decision, or one to try and give Ellie a better, guilt free life. He basically saved her when there was no guarantee her sacrifice would have worked in terms of finding a vaccine, but I think that Ellie wouldn't see it that way.
The clever part of the ending is that despite Joel seeming selfish in keeping her alive almost as a replacement for his daughter, his lie was him acting like a parent, and I think Ellie is okay with his lie because she sees that too.
Love that idea.London for the DLC? That'd be amazing!
Uncharted, not Unchartered
It's not a game series about accountants gone rogue.