Is the fungal science in The Last of Us going off the rails?

May Be Interested In:Nodule found in former President Joe Biden’s prostate during routine physical exam


“Have you ever seen a fungus move in real life?” Episode 2 of the new season of The Last of Us

HBO

There was something I loved and something I hated in the first season of The Last of Us, the post-apocalyptic TV show based on the hit video game of the same name, in which humanity fights against fungus-infected monsters. On the pro side, the scenography is incredible: from creatures infected with a mutated Cordyceps (the “zombie-ant fungus” now turning humans into ravaging cannibals) to the eerie overgrowth dominating everything, the imagery presents a hostile world cunningly reclaimed…

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Collage showing Big Ben and the Statue of Liberty, with red and blue arrows crossing in the background
Gen Z Americans are leaving their European cousins in the dust
Ajax vs Eintracht Frankfurt: How to watch live streams of the UEFA Europa League
Ajax vs Eintracht Frankfurt: How to watch live streams of the UEFA Europa League
Michael Saylor
IRS Layoffs Could Delay 2025 Tax Refund
Scientists drill nearly 2 miles to pull 1.2 million-year-old ice core from Antarctic
Scientists drill nearly 2 miles to pull 1.2 million-year-old ice core from Antarctic
Dramatically lit studio shot of a scene from The Verge’s “Friend or Faux?” feature.
One creator talks visualizing AI companionship
Kayden Stroeder, a call-up from the Saskatoon AAA Contacts, has extended his hockey season with the WHL's Edmonton Oil Kings.
Highly touted Kayden Stroeder gets taste of junior hockey in WHL
Hot Topics: The Stories the World Is Watching | © 2025 | Daily News