Co-showrunners Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin have recently defended their choice to cast Dever as Abby. Druckmann, who created the video game franchise, said that if they’d confined Abby’s casting to actors with a muscular build, they “would’ve struggled to find someone as good as Kaitlyn to play this role.” It would’ve significantly limited their number of options, and they would’ve focused on finding someone who was more of a physical match for the character than an emotional match. Druckmann and Mazin’s comments confirm that the controversy around Dever’s casting is completely unfounded.
The Last Of Us Season 2 Is Making Abby More "Physically Vulnerable" Than In The Game
The TV Show Is Going For A Different Take On Ellie & Abby's Dynamic
Abby’s rigorous training and her intimidating physique are a big part of her character in The Last of Us Part II: it’s a visual way to show the audience how much her drive for vengeance has consumed her. She’s been so focused on exacting revenge against her father’s killer that she’s spent four years hitting the gym, turning her body into a finely tuned fighting machine. It’s also a functional part of the gameplay. It differentiates Abby’s gameplay from Ellie’s; Ellie is sleek, stealthy, and agile, while Abby is a brutal force of nature.
Plus, it draws a clear parallel to Joel. Abby taking Lev and Yara under her wing and doing everything in her power to protect them is reminiscent of Joel becoming a father figure to Ellie; this parallel is bolstered by gameplay reminiscent of playing as Joel in the first game. But it sounds like the showrunners of the TV series are leaning more into Abby’s parallels with Ellie than her parallels with Joel. Abby’s similarity to Ellie is also a key factor in the story. They’re both motivated by the same thing: avenging their father.
Mazin has said that the version of Abby in the TV show is “perhaps physically more vulnerable than the Abby in the game, but [her] spirit is stronger.”
Druckmann said that, with Dever, they found an actor that audiences could connect to “the way we connect to Bella.” By comparing Dever’s portrayal of Abby to the emotional attachment audiences already have with Bella Ramsey’s Ellie, Druckmann is all but confirming that the TV show will have a different take on the dynamic between Abby and Ellie. For people who have already played the game, there will be something new here. Mazin has said that the version of Abby in the TV show is “perhaps physically more vulnerable than the Abby in the game, but [her] spirit is stronger.”