Tomb Raider: The Kotaku Review


I never wanted to have sex with Lara Croft. And I didn’t want to protect her either. In the early Tomb Raider games that I played and loved, the relationship was simple. The lethal, archly snippy adventurer was me and I was her. I wanted what she wanted: to unearth the relics of antiquity. To go where human footsteps had never tread. To forge ahead into mystery.

God, I remember swimming to Atlantis in Tomb Raider 1 so vividly. Any game that could create that much awe in me deserved its accolades, no matter what shape the character’s polygons were sculpted into.

But then Lara got lost. Too many games with too little to recommend them made it so that people only focused on her body and what she wore. (Yes, 2006’s Legend recaptured some of the good ol’ days, but its spark wasn’t enough to keep the series’ fires burning.) So it’s meaningful then that this Tomb Raider reboot starts Lara off at a new beginning. Also significant is the notion that the character who became one of video games’ biggest stars gains — and loses — some vigour on her new journey.

In the game, allusions are made to Lara’s lineage — as before, she’s the daughter of a renowned explorer — and they’re heavy with symbolism. “I don’t think I’m that kind of Croft,” she says to her mentor at one point. “Sure you are,” he replies. “You just don’t know it yet.” This game’s all about making Lara into a survivor, both inside the game and out on real-world store shelves. In many ways, this Tomb Raider is a game of catch-up, something to establish parity with the other bankable personas and franchises of the modern gaming landscape.

Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider is a taut re-imagining of the iconic Lara Croft as a more vulnerable but increasingly empowered heroine.

Developer: Crystal Dynamics
Platforms: PS3, Xbox 360, PC (version played)
Released: March 5
Type of game: action/stealth origin story with survival horror overtones and online play.
What I played: played through all of the singleplayer campaign in about 15 hours, raided a few tombs

Two Things I Liked

  • Yamatai is a palimpsest of despair, a richly designed environment that echoes throughout history. Axis German troops, US Marines from the early 1900s, 17th century Japanese military forces… everyone was on this island! Finding remnants of previous lost souls makes you want to avoid sharing their fate.
  • The primal feeling of wielding the bow and arrow as a means of survival is tough to beat in Tomb Raider.

Two Things I Didn’t Like

  • Tomb Raider 2013 can feel unrelentingly gloomy. Don’t go in expecting to feel like a wisecracking badass.
  • Every time I felt forced to resort to modern forearms, I felt dirty.

Made-to-Order Back-of-Box Quotes

  • “Best zip-lines ever!” — Evan Narcisse, Kotaku
  • “Attention, DC Comics and Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment: Steal everything applicable from Tomb Raider if you want to make a kickass Green Arrow game.” — Evan Narcisse, Kotaku

You can feel the ambitions of the Crystal Dynamics creative team in the design of the game’s component parts. The presentational elements — plot, dialogue, voice acting and art design — all shine. Some characters lean too heavily on type but not so much as to be really annoying. This is a beautiful game to look at too with great animations and modelling/texture work that’s bursting with vivid, horrid detail in the characters and environments.

That last bit is key, as Tomb Raider quickly establishes it’s going to be far more horror-inflected than its predecessors. We meet Lara as part of an archaeological reality television show, heading out in search of a mysterious lost civilisation called Yamatai on a ship called the Endurance. Crew members’ personalities run the gamut from gruff to kindly and — in the case of the show’s star Dr Whitman — desperately egotistical. The Endurance wrecks on the coast of Yamatai and, from there, Lara must stumble through tableaus of human sacrifice, cult religion and agonising despair to learn the skills necessary to save her friends.

I kept wondering how passionately this game would embrace awe and astonishment while mired in grit. Yamatai itself — and the men prowling it — provides the answer. The game’s locale is a cursed place, an island-of-no-return in the Pacific where ships and planes have been crashing for centuries. Players will find journal entries from the people who had been trapped here long ago and you learn that no one ever left. The latter-day stranded are pirates and mercenaries belonging to a cult called the Solarii. Their charismatic leader believes the freak storms that keep them trapped there are powered by the ancient Japanese legend of the Sun Goddess.

The Solarii also conduct ritual sacrifices of women castaways aimed at ending their exile and Lara’s friend Sam is on deck to become their latest victim. As far as made-up mythologies go, it’s not a bad one. The Sun Goddess element feels better for the scepticism some of the enemy rank-and-file have about the myth. This instalment also treats the existence of the fantastic with better build-up and a trepidation that’s more believable. The lore embedded into the game builds an oppressive air that adds fuel to the desperation at the core of this Tomb Raider.

Much of Tomb Raider re-contextualises elements that will be recognisable to anyone who’s played a third-person action game in the last five years: specially timed finishers in melee combat, shooting sequences that rely heavily on cover mechanics and a segmented open-world design that opens up as you gain more tools and weapon modifications. Likewise, Tomb Raider uses an experience system that aggregates points as you play and offers up scads of unlockable collectible challenges. Lara’s Survival Instinct — a special sight that highlights enemies and collectibles in the environment — will also be familiar. There’s stealth too, and thankfully it feels meaningful rather than tacked on. Brawling or blasting away out in the open is never a path to victory for Lara.

As Lara explores the massive Island, you can set up camps, which act as save hubs and fast-travel stations for when you want to return to certain areas. Those camps are also where you upgrade weapons, skills and gear with salvage that you collect.

Are there tombs in Tomb Raider 2013? Yes. They’re entirely optional, though, and are mostly hidden, combat-free zones concerned with environmental puzzle-solving. Exploring tombs gives you secrets and rewards — like skill points for upgrades and maps that show where relics and other collectibles are — so it’s worth the investment of playing through them. They’re also a quiet remove from all the human/animal aggression on the game’s main path.

The Metroidvania elements to Tomb Raider‘s game design feel well thought-out, too. When you get the Rope Arrow ability, for example, it comes across as the result of Lara’s increasing ingenuity, not just an expected design feature. The skill unlocking makes getting around Yamatai feel like the most fun part of a grim enterprise. As you launch climbable ropes across previously uncrossable chasms or destroy barriers with grenades or shotgun blasts, Lara feels less and less like she’s at the mercy of the environment.

The key difference from, say, Batman: Arkham City or any Uncharted game is how effectively Tomb Raider drives home the physically gruelling experience of being an adventure hero. After all, you never see Batman sweat and, despite his grumbling, Nathan Drake tends to be very well-adjusted to what he has to endure. Not the 2013 edition of Lara Croft. She yelps, groans and screams in combat and traversal. You know she’s going to make that jump. But it’s going to sound really unpleasant when she does. And when she dies? The game unleashes truly gruesome death scenes — which, yes, call back to previous TR games — that turned my stomach no matter how often I saw them.


Ominous dread replaces intrepid sauciness in this reboot, and there’s little of the breathless wonder that distinguished the first Tomb Raider games. You will see beautiful vistas, yes, but not much joy accompanies those moments. A tight claustrophobic camera zooms in on Lara when she squeezes through tight crevices and, even in the game’s more open environments, a tense anxiety is never too far off. But that dread makes the play of the game feel deeply satisfying.

I grew to love the bow and arrow intensely in Tomb Raider, so much so that it was still my go-to weapon even after I’d gotten a shotgun and a grenade launcher add-on for my rifle. Lara spends so much of the game with wracked nerves and hiding from bigger, more vicious male aggressors. The bow gives you a way to weaponise all that angst. I always tried for headshots, to make sure the awful bastards shooting at me went down as egregiously as possible. Kotaku video editor Chris Person did the same, only he aimed for the crotch. Either way, pulling the string taut and letting fly feels like dishing out comeuppance.

Take the oppressive mood, the women-centric plot and the intimate nature of Tomb Raider‘s violence and this feels more desperate than any Uncharted game. There isn’t as much dissonance between the narrative and the play. You’ll believe in what’s at stake and in the need to come out on top.

Initially, players will have to weather too many incredulous and affirmation-style statements — “Oh, God, what am I doing?”, “I can do this”, etc — but eventually, Lara starts growling back at her antagonists. Despite that, Lara winds up feeling like a sacrificial lamb on the altar of commercial video games. This is a video game icon becoming who she needs to be to stay alive and you’re privy to an exhausting rebirth. Even when you come to the end of the game, you desperately hope that you and Lara will never, ever have to go through anything like that again. I liked what I played but I really want Square Enix and Crystal Dynamics to get Lara on her way to being cockily self-assured again.

Even if you know nothing about the earlier controversies that swirled around this game last year, it’s impossible to play 2013 Tomb Raider and not breathe in all the subtext in its atmosphere. It’s irresistibly ripe for interpretation: a cult of violent, trapped men forming around the myth of a vengeful Sun Goddess and a young, outmatched woman who gets bruised ad infinitum on her Hero’s Journey. On its face, Tomb Raider doesn’t appear to be about the portrayals of female characters in popular entertainment. But it’s certainly ready to be read that way.


That layering — like the overall shift in tone — serves to gin up the experience in a counterintuitive way. It’s the kind of feel-bad that feels good. If you miss the old Lara, you’re compelled to finish this title to get her closer to the snarky, actualised persona of the PS1 era. In the game, Lara has been a doubter of the tales her father brought back home with him. “The lines between our myths and the truth is blurry,” she realises at the game’s end. The truth here is that this game is a finely crafted reboot, one that ensures that Lara Croft herself won’t become a relic of the past. It’s gloomier, yes, and laden with a thick sheen of meta-awareness. This new origin story throws more trouble at its heroine than ever before. But the changes folded into this Tomb Raider add a turbulent urgency that the old adventures lacked. We’re left with a Lara Croft that we know better. She can handle what’s coming, especially when it looks like she can’t.

Note: Tomb Raider offers online multiplayer but I hadn’t yet sampled the experience at press time. Once I get the chance to evaluate the game’s online modes, I will update this review.


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