Our The Last of Us Part II Remastered PS5 review covers No Return, Lost Levels and DualSense upgrades in detail. Is the $49.99 remaster worth it?

| Developer | Naughty Dog |
| Publisher | Sony Interactive Entertainment |
| Release Date | 19 January 2024 |
| Platforms | PS5 (Remastered, reviewed), Windows (Remastered), PS4 (original release) |
| Price | £44.99/$49.99 (standard), plus a $10 upgrade option for PS4 owners |
| Rating | PEGI 18 | ESRB Mature 17+ |
| Genre | Action-adventure |
| Length | (main story) ~24 hours and (story + side content) ~29-30 hours Install Size ~79-85 GB |
What lands best is the environmental storytelling. The game’s locations, from snowy settlement calm to rain-soaked urban sprawl, are packed with micro-narratives: improvised barricades, abandoned notes, and domestic clutter that tells you who lived here and how they left. Remastered does not add new set-pieces to the main campaign, but it makes it easier to appreciate the craft already present, particularly when paired with faster load times that reduce the friction of revisiting chapters.
The PS5 version also leans into immersion through DualSense. Haptics and adaptive triggers give weapons a more tactile identity, while the overall feedback makes stealthy movement and frantic scrambles feel more grounded. It is not transformative on its own, but in a game built on tension, small sensory cues matter.
Remastered’s most meaningful addition is No Return, a standalone roguelike survival mode that reframes the same mechanics as a replayable challenge suite. You pick from a roster of characters and work through branching, randomised encounters, managing health, ammo, and upgrades on the fly. The mode includes custom runs, daily runs, and its own trophies, with accessibility options designed to carry across.
No Return is also a smart answer to a common criticism of narrative-heavy games: once you know the plot, what is left? Here, the combat is the point. It asks you to master the toolkit, adapt to modifiers, and enjoy the friction of tough decisions without the emotional heaviness of the campaign always hanging over you. For many players, it is the feature that justifies the PS5 version on its own.
See all The Last of Us coverage on SpawningPoint.
The Last of Us Part II Remastered on PS5 is less a cosmetic touch-up and more a feature-complete reissue. Native 4K and smoother performance options help, but the real value comes from No Return, a roguelike survival mode that turns the game’s tense stealth-action into endlessly replayable runs. Lost Levels, extensive developer commentary, and Grounded II deepen the package for anyone curious about how the game was made. At £44.99 / $49.99 it is a premium buy, yet the upgrade route is a clear win for PS4 owners. For newcomers, this is the best way to experience a bold, emotionally demanding sequel.