But if you finish her half of the game and still feel pure hatred, Naughty Dog would argue you have missed the point. In a world ravaged by a fungal apocalypse, there are no "good guys" or "villains." There are only people.
The brutal irony is that killing Joel didn’t fix her. She still had nightmares of her father’s body. It wasn’t until she saved Lev—a helpless child—that the nightmares stopped. She didn't need revenge; she needed purpose. The game’s final confrontation on the beach is not a boss fight; it is a study in exhaustion. Ellie, starved and bleeding, forces a crucified and emaciated Abby into a knife fight. There are no acrobatics. Just two people who have lost everything: their friends, their lovers, their fingers, and their innocence. violetta abby winters
Joel was a hero to Ellie and a monster to the Fireflies. Abby was a monster to Ellie and a hero to Lev. She asks a question we don’t want to answer: If someone killed your father to save a stranger, wouldn’t you pick up the club? The Legacy As we look toward the future (be it The Last of Us Part III or the HBO adaptation), Abby stands as a landmark character. She proved that video games can make you hate a character, live as them, and—perhaps—forgive them. But if you finish her half of the