Former Naughty Dog Designer Calls Out Studio For Erasing His Work On The Last Of Us

Expert Verified By

Sony Pushing The Remake As The Definitive Version Also Angered The Developer.

Story Highlight
  • Ex Naughty Dog designer Benson Russel has called out the studio for erasing his work on The Last of Us.
  • The first game’s remake didn’t use the combat system Russel developed for the original.
  • In addition, Sony pushing the remake as the definitive edition further angered the developer.

After a flurry of remakes, Naughty Dog is set to make its big comeback in 2027 with a new IP, Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet. The studio is hard at work on multiple projects, according to a former employee, with one of these games reportedly being a new Uncharted title.

But, with fans not completely buying into Intergalactic, Naughty Dog needs to make a few brilliant games to counteract the bad PR. From the looks of it, however, the studio’s reputation can take another hit as a former designer has called them out for deleting his work on The Last of Us.

Why it matters: The original Last of Us is one of the most influential games of this century, and pushing the remake as the definitive way to play it is a disservice to the developers who worked on the 2013 title.

In an interview with Kiwi Talkz, ex-Naughty Dog combat designer Benson Russel called out the studio for replacing the combat systems he built for the original Last of Us with newer technology in the remake.

When they put out The Last of Us Part 1, where they reworked the game and they used The Last of Us 2 tech to redo the combat encounters and other things. That one’s a sour spot for me. It is literally taking my scripts, pushing delete, and putting all new scripts in, and that was a load of work.

The developer revealed that The Last of Us Part 1 remake didn’t utilise any of the combat encounters or scripts he had developed for the 2013 original. Instead, newer technology from The Last of Us Part 2 was used, which really angered the veteran combat designer.

Russel explained that this is a sour spot for him, as the company took all his scripts and just deleted them, erasing a ton of work he had done.

The Last of Us Part 1 naughty dog
The remake is the definitive version of the game, as per Sony.

In addition, Sony pushing the remake as the definitive way to play The Last of Us Part 1 annoyed the developer even more, who thinks it’s a slap in the face of people who worked so hard on the 2013 original.

Do you think Benson Russel is right to be angry at the studio for deleting his work? Tell us in the comments below or head to the Tech4Gamers forum for discussion.

Was our article helpful? 👨‍💻

Thank you! Please share your positive feedback. 🔋

How could we improve this post? Please Help us. 😔

Gear Up For Latest News

Get exclusive gaming & tech news before it drops. Sign up today!

Join Our Community

Still having issues? Join the Tech4Gamers Forum for expert help and community support!

Latest News

Join Our Community

104,000FansLike
32,122FollowersFollow

Trending

Scammers Are Now Putting Plastic GPUs and Scrap Memory in NVIDIA RTX Graphics Cards

A broken GeForce RTX 4090 in China bought for $222 was discovered to have a plastic GPU die and scrap memory chips.

AMD Reportedly Cancels RX 9080 XT, No New GPU To Compete With NVIDIA’s RTX 50 SUPER Series

AMD can cancel the release of RX 9080 XT due to high memory costs, leaving no new GPU to compete with Nvidia RTX 50 super series.

Sony Is Reportedly Considering to Push PS6 Beyond 2027 Amid Memory Crisis

According to Embracer's recent report, Sony could be considering delaying the PS6 to beyond 2027 due to the ongoing memory crisis.

GTA 6 Pre-Orders Officially Confirmed For June 25, Cover Art Revealed

Rockstar Games has finally confirmed GTA 6 pre-orders for June 25 in a new short video. The video also shows the game's official cover art.

Sony Leadership Blames Bungie For Its Live Service Strategy Failures, Says Journalist

A new report suggests that Sony blames Bungie for a number of issues with its live-service strategy, as layoffs loom over the studio.