Tag: Lara Croft

  • Rise Of The Tomb Raider Announced. First Trailer Shown

    Well that didn’t take long to make my E3. During Microsoft’s event today, the first trailer for the sequel to 2013’s Tomb Raider was shown.

    Called Rise of the Tomb Raider, the trailer features Lara in therapy due to the events in the first game. We see that Laura has been changed by her adventure and is now becoming the Lara Croft we discovered in the days of the original Playstation.

    Rise of the Tomb Raider will release Holiday 2015 (please do).

     

  • Tomb Raider Sequel Officially In Development

    2013_lara_croft_tomb_raider-wide

    It is now official, we will see more of Lara Croft.

    Really there was little doubt after this year’s [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] reboot garnered great reviews and sold extremely well despite the fact Square complained about the sales numbers. It must be hard for them to admit that their western arm is the only thing keeping their company afloat.

    CEO Phil Rogers has sent out an open letter confirming the sequel is already in development for next-gen consoles.

    “I am also excited to reveal that we are well into development on a next-generation Tomb Raider sequel – something you may have heard about recently.”

    The game was loved by everyone here as we did a dual review for the game and both reviews agreed upon an 8.5. Even as I played the game, I remember being excited about what the development team could do with next generation hardware and I am glad we will get a chance to see.

    Darrell Gallagher, head of product development at Square spoke on giving fans even more the second time around:

    “It’s still early days, so I’m afraid I can’t provide any further details for now save my assurance that we’re not resting on our laurels and acclaim from Tomb Raider’s recent successes, but working hard to raise the bar even higher and re-affirm the faith you’ve shown.”

     

     

  • Scott’s Review: Tomb Raider

    tombraider-2013-sn2

    OK if you follow us here at Nerd Rating on a normal basis (and why wouldn’t you?) you should know how excited we were to finally get our hands on [amazon_link id=”B00A7QA0XE” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link]. I have been posting every bit of news, trailers, survival guides, any piece I could get my hands on to get you just as excited. The game has been on everyone’s radar since E3 2011 when Crystal Dynamics showed off the first bit of gameplay and wowed everyone on the floor. The team decided to take Lara back to the beginning and show exactly how she became the dual pistol toting, short short wearing adventurer that we first went gaga over back in 1996.

    Did they succeed in bringing Lara back to the forefront of gaming? Let’s take a look and see.

    best-game-tomb-raider-hd-wallpaper-Best-2013-Game-Tomb-Raider-HD-Wallpaper

    I’m just a girl, in the world.

    You are thrust into the story of Tomb Raider much quicker than you might think. Just as you are getting used to seeing this new, younger Lara and her shipmates there is a massive storm and you are washed up on shore after your ship has been broken apart at sea. You find yourself knocked out by someone and regain consciousness hanging upside down in a cave surrounded by dead bodies and a creepy “it puts the lotion on it’s skin” vibe from your surroundings. After freeing yourself, you immediately feel a sense of helplessness that is quite new from most games. You are not a raging badass marine or an ex-con with a load of weapons, you are a scared young woman with not a knife, or hell, even a rock in your possession.

    It is in the beginning parts of Tomb Raider that Crystal Dynamics takes some of the biggest chances. For the first hour or so it is a mixture of learning basic controls and quick time events. Now don’t let the dreaded QTE get you down. This is all done with the express intent to have you more involved in Lara’s dire circumstances on the island and happen far less as you get into the real meat of the gameplay and gunplay. Even when you begin brandishing your first piece of weaponry, a bow stolen off of a rotting corpse, you still have this overall feeling of impotence against what the island has in store for you. It may be weird to read this, but I rather enjoyed this part of Tomb Raider. Hoping my torch would not go out from running water in a cramped, claustrophobic cave of hearing the howl of a pack of wolves that are coming is the way more games should handle the beginning hours of a hero’s story.

    Now if you have read more than one review about Tomb Raider then this is going sound very familiar, but it is probably because it is one of the major trip ups of the game. Over the first hour or two of the game you are introduced to a very human Lara. She shows sadness in her face the first time she has to kill a deer in order to eat on the island. When it finally comes time in having to choose between being (possibly) sexually assaulted and killed or taking a life, it is handled in such a meaningful and dramatic way that you really feel that this game can do no wrong.

    And then it does wrong.

    There is no easing Lara into the process of killing. Once she has evacuated the first man’s head of brain matter, the game thrusts you into the role of killing machine that we are used to. It takes all the previous good works and says “fu** it, here is your action”. But even in one of Tomb Raider’s biggest slip ups, it finds one of its greatest attributes. When you begin to carry pistols, shoguns and more, the controls and gunplay are superb. I did find the quick transition into human grind machine very stark and contrast to the beginning of the game, but dammit if I did not have fun with what the game was throwing at me. As a man who loves Uncharted and will until the day I leave this mortal coil, I can truly say that these controls are what Nathan Drake should only hope to be. I hope Naughty Dog is taking notes off of this because this will be on the Uncharted 4 test. Lara moves with such ease and fluidity. There is no need for a cover button because the game’s auto cover system actually…..get this….WORKS! She naturally takes cover when close to nearby threats and can run out without having to worry about getting stuck to environments or going behind the wrong wall. Whoever at Crystal Dynamics designed this deserves a raise and a nice big cookie because this should be used by every adventure game from here on out.

    Beyond that, Lara’s movements around the rest of the island feel natural. Platforming is just freaking fun especially with the verticality of the levels. The level design lends itself to multiple paths in which to avoid enemies or give two or three different options on how to take them on. Running, jumping, using the climbing ax to ascend and descend rock faces, making rope bridges to climb over gaps and so much more are available to help Lara discover all of what the island has to offer and it all just plain works. I can not applaud the controls enough.

    The island is not exactly open-world, but it takes the Arkham Asylum approach to make it feel like the massive levels all interconnect together to create an open-world game. Every open area has its own section on the overall island map and holds its own litany of collectibles to be found and tombs to be raided. There are diaries of various characters that will open up the story, GPS caches scattered throughout and various artifacts to be discovered. All of these are basically here to serve two purposes: to get you more XP so you can upgrade Lara’s abilities and weapon uses and to completely piss off OCD gamers, like myself, that need to see a 100% completion number by your game save.

    Lara’s upgrade system is not going to set the game world on fire with how unique it is, but it gets the job done. Most of her abilities are what we have seen in every game such as taking less damage from falls and stealth kills. There is a good reason to upgrade all of these because you are awarded a different melee kill with every weapon you have equipped. When an enemy attacks and you dodge, you are given a small window to hit the Y button and incapacitate your opponent then they are at your mercy for a brutal, bloody kill.

    The weapon upgrade system is a mixture of unneeded fluff and useful tools. While I don’t really care about putting a silencer on my pistol when I am going in guns blazing, I do have to upgrade my bow parts to be able to make rope bridges and attach a grenade launcher to my assault rifle to blast into new areas. Tomb Raider has mixed the fluff and needed together well enough so you don’t feel like you are simply wasting your time upgrading most weapons. Realistically there is a point you can stop when you unlock all the new ways to get to previous areas, but I was already engrossed with getting the achievement points that there was no reason to stop there.

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     Lara and the smoke monster

    Tomb Raider creates such an entertaining locale with the island that it is a bit of a down note to say that the story is not up to par with the rest of the production. When Lara’s adventure begins there is any number of directions that the story could have gone. But you realize all too soon that she is the only fully developed character in the game. The rest of the people are a veritable who’s who of video game cliches. As I think back on the game, I am trying to remember any of the names of Lara’s shipwrecked crew that I spent the game trying to save and I can only think of one and that is just because she may have had lesbian feelings for Lara and well…I am a guy. Survival is your main motivation, but don’t expect much in the way of caring about your group enough to rescue them. Honestly I am glad, for their sake, that it wasn’t a choice like at the end of Far Cry 3 because I would be the only one getting out alive.

    When you become aware of the “twist” in Tomb Raider’s story it is a big disappointment. Guess what?? It’s supernatural!! If Uncharted had not already blew my dick off with that back in 2006 then I would be agape with surprise. There were so many more places to take this story, especially with the great and noticeable nods to TV shows like LOST and movies like The Descent. Don’t get me wrong, you won’t make your way through Tomb raider rolling your eyes or anything, but you are not going to tell people to pay 60 bucks for its story either. It is just a shame that they spent so much time making Lara such a real and relatable protagonist that it is doing her a disservice by surrounding her with a forgettable secondary cast of characters and a hokey story that has been done before (and in Uncharted’s case, better).

    Don’t get me wrong, when Tomb Raider does something right, it does it very right. The game is visually stunning and really should be at the forefront of any argument as to why this current generation still has a lot of life left in it. There were times going back through the game to find all the collectibles that I would stop for a moment and appreciate just how much work went into making this game a realization. The story does leave something to be desired, but that is why we have that wonderful word: sequel. Crystal Dynamics has crafted a game that is a solid stepping stone for a new Lara Croft that will hopefully yield greater results in the future. Gameplay is as smooth as any action game and the upgrade system is more than serviceable. If Crystal Dynamics can get Lara a better cast of characters and a stronger story then there is no telling just how great the next Tomb Raider game could be.

    Welcome back Ms. Croft. You are a survivor.

  • Tomb Raider By The Numbers

    Photo courtesy of joystiq.com
    Photo courtesy of joystiq.com

    We here at Nerd Rating are in the middle of [amazon_link id=”B00A7QA0XE” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] fever. We just put up our first review of the reboot handled by Mr. Trey Sterling and my review should be along any day now.

    Today, Square has released some fun number facts about Lara’s reboot adventure. Let’s take a look:

    – 13,742,891 close calls

    -11,067,764 enemies dodged

    -147,675,058 enemies killed with a bow

    -20,601,083 enemies killed with fire arrows

    -356,988,302 arrows looted off of fallen enemies

    -5,294,879 deers hunted

    -1,417,750 crabs hunted

    -3,570,956 tombs raided

    I know these number are really inconsequential, but I am a nerd for useless facts like this. I am glad to know that I was not the only one murdering helpless crabs left and right just to gain the tiny bit of salvage to max everything out. I am sitting on 98% completion and I will not be denied!!

  • Adventure Found Me: Trey’s Tomb Raider Review

    Stonking Great T*ts

    TR Boobs

    I was around 12 or 13 when I got my first Tomb Raider game (Tomb Raider 2 on the Playstation, to be exact), so I was just the right age to feel all the ways that most gamers have felt about Lara croft at one point or another. I cannot tell a lie: I even went so far as to secretly use the family computer to (gasp!) try and look up cheats to make her more… Naked. That’s the right word. However, underneath all the hormones was a young gamer just starting to really understand that games could be more than just idle distractions. TR 2 doesn’t tell the best story in the world, but it did feature some amazing locales and genuinely engaging platforming, with some moderate puzzle-solving for good measure.

    That was the last retail release I actually picked up in the franchise before now, though I did play the demos for most all of them and rent a few others along the way. I watched with everyone else as the series stagnated, then tried to evolve, then tried to recapture its former glory. By the time we got to TR: Anniversary (2007) and TR: Legend (2008), the release of Uncharted only served to highlight the franchise’s slow descent into obscurity.

    Training Bra

    TR Lara

    Everything old is new again, and we find a fresh-faced Lara Croft in a cabin on a ship on her way to investigate… something. The game starts off with a bang, and then a thud, scream, puncture wound, explosion and cave-in. If the idea was to make the player feel as overwhelmed and exhausted as Lara, the developers succeeded in spades. The end of this initial rush finds Lara stranded on a remote island, cut off from her crew and in desperate need of some shampoo, trail mix, and a good abdominal surgeon; she manages a bow, some arrows, and a rock tied to a stick.

    From there, the player must try to survive, meet up with the others, and find a way off the island, in that order. Of course, things don’t always go as planned; there’s at least one group of haggard, possibly fanatical men running around kidnapping people and trying to do bad things to attractive young women. One of these lucky gentleman has the dubious honor of becoming the first person Lara ever kills; he does not die well. In fact, he dies so “not well” that I had to look at the ESRB rating and discover that the game did in fact receive a “M for Mature.”

    TR Twist

    Lara again finds herself separated from the crew, and then… I didn’t care anymore. I’m sorry for jumping the gun on this, but I can’t help it. The story in this game is a mess, and it honestly became kind of a distraction. The main thrust is supposed to be the whole “A Survivor is Born” tagline; that’s what the game’s last achievement is called, and then the damned words poop up on the screen pre-credits with a music spike to boot. I’ll admit that your first three kills – a deer, a wolf, and then Rapey McFeels-You-Up – are executed in such a way that they have gravitas, but literally two minutes after that you’re murdering guys left and right. Hell, five minutes after that the game is actively encouraging you to drop lanterns on guys and burn them alive.

    TR Fire

    Hot on the heels of that failed plot device are the rest of your crew, who might as well be called the following: BFF / Lover Maguffin, Dead by the End Mentor, Obvious Betrayal Glasses Guy, Nerdy Glasses Guy, Sassy Black Woman, Surly First Mate from UK, and Ethnic Heritage Wisdom Man.

    The issue here is that the game seems to put all of its story stock in you giving a crap about these people, without ever giving you a single instance to get to know anything about them. The game’s maguffin character, Sam, is either Lara’s best friend or her lesbian lover; I honestly could not tell you which, because the games provides evidence toward both ends. This takes all the urgency out of a majority of the story, since I lack a point of reference for these characters, their relationship to Lara and each other, and their basic motivations. All it would have taken was an introductory level on the ship, where you interacted with each of them while learning a few mechanics, to give the player some bearing for the remainder of the plot.

     

    Finally, the game commits that most dire of sins in games where there are collectibles scattered throughout the world; instead of enhancing the story, these knickknacks are given the burden of telling significant parts of the story. This bleeds over a little into the previous paragraph, but is at its worst concerning the aforementioned other island inhabitants, previous visitors to the island, and the island itself. The most noticeable victim is the game’s main villain, as everything about him – name, motivations, favorite flavor of ice cream – Lara just seems to know, but the player can only discover by stopping mid-play to read his diary pages. This is compounded by the fact that, while text for such items is narrated when looking at it in menus, it cuts off if you try and keep playing while listening.

    I’m not saying there’s nothing good about the story, especially considering there’s an insane twist at one point that they managed to keep completely off-the-radar during marketing. I don’t want to spoil too much, but I will say that the parts involved in this twist help the game earn its Mature rating in spades. The final act you take as the player – an event that is teased several points during the story – will also make long-time fans of the series smile.

    Sports Bra

    For those of you who like to cheat and look at our scores first, you’re probably wondering “How did we get that number from everything negative he just said?” That number comes 100% from the gameplay; the platforming, shooting, puzzle-solving, free roaming, and set-piece surviving is all executed near flawlessly.

    TR Setpiece

    The first thing I have to talk about here is pacing, because the game wouldn’t be the same if it didn’t flow as well as it did. The basic formula is this: You’ll start in an open area where you might have platforming and combat, with a chance to look around and find hidden goodies; those tend to flow directly into linear action / platforming sections where the pace picks up; finally, you are thrust into a setpiece that mixes run-and-gun with zero-tolerance platforming, usually while the area you’ve been in comes to pieces around you. Inevitably you escape and do a bit of light platforming until you reach the next big area. The end result is that I almost never got bored, and found it hard to stop playing most nights.

    The open areas are marvels of design, with multiple ways to get to and from each ledge, hill, and rope. The main draw of these areas is to scavenge for material you can use to upgrade your gear; secondary to me was the chance to find a hidden tomb; the last thing on my list was usually collectables, but damned if I didn’t get invested when I saw something I couldn’t quite reach. Most of these areas are usually visited twice, and tend to contain out-of-reach items you’ll need a gadget from the upcoming linear bit to finally obtain.

    TR Enviro

    The combat is, in my opinion, an enormous step forward for games of this ilk thanks to two words: Auto. Cover. When you’re in an area with enemies nearby, any Lara approaches immediately becomes cover; move away from it, and Lara simply disengages and moves freely. Never again do expect to press a button for cover in an Uncharted game, only to take cover behind the wrong thing and then get stuck there as enemies use Drake for target practice.

    Unfortunately, Tomb Raider does take a bad cue from its alternate-gender franchise: At the very climax of the game, it forgets to be an adventure-platformer with shooting elements and tries to be Gears of War. I don’t know what douche is infiltrating dev meetings at Naughty Dog and Crystal Dynamics, but his pitch is always the same: “Hey, right near the end, let’s throw double the number of enemies from any previous sections in there, only we’ll find arbitrary ways to make the environment cramped. Then let’s cap that off with a multi-stage boss fight involving quick-time events and waves of regular enemies.” I don’t know who you are, but if I ever find you, I’m going to discover your weak spot and deal damage until I can do something horrible to you once you’ve been downed. Three. Times. In. A. Row.

    *Obvious Gripe Voice* This is an intense 3D platformer, where the platforms are occasionally falling, breaking, burning, or some other nonsense, and sometimes during these sections it becomes infuriatingly difficult to determine where the ^(@& I’m supposed to be jumping. *End O.G.V.*

    The only other flaw comes in the lack of instruction concerning upgrading your weapons… or maybe my complaint is with modifying them? I don’t know, because the game won’t tell me. Essentially, one of them uses scrap to do standard upgrades, and one requires you to find parts scattered throughout the game to do a complete overhaul on your weapon. The latter of these two is so inconsistent – where you get the parts, how to tell if you have any parts, determining what parts you may have missed and need to go back for – that entire forums have sprung up about the topic. My honest suggestion is that you just kind of roll with things on your first playthrough, since the overhaul happens automatically at the next campfire once you have all the required parts. After you’ve finished, you can go back worry about any pieces you’re missing.

    Body by Victoria

    TR Bloody

    From a technical perspective, the game is fairly impressive. The graphics are crisp and consistent, and the environments are appropriately detailed and populated; some of the draw distances are fantastic, especially at times when you’re looking at something in the distance and thinking “I’m going to be there, soon.” I never noticed any real clipping, tearing, or what have you. The game does occasionally slow to a crawl while auto-saving, sometimes several times in a few minutes if you’re picking up lots of collectables in a small area. The sound is stellar, though the music, voices, and effects are sometimes balanced poorly; for some odd reason, sound effects and dialogue volume can’t be adjusted separately.

    I did “enjoy” finding one massive technical flaw in the game, something which I can attest that others have encountered as well, but I’m going to save that for after my final score. For now, just know that it was game-breaking, for all intents and purposes. My sincere hope is that it has already been patched.

    This isn’t twelve-year-old me’s Tomb Raider, that’s for damn sure; while Lara isn’t unattractive by any means, she spends the entire game so dirty, bloody, beaten, and exhausted that sexualizing her would take several long showers and at least two major surgeries.  Though the writing of Lara’s rebirth as a “survivor” may not deliver, the gameplay delivers on almost every front, and definitely points toward the series having found better footing after years of clinging to the crumbling ledges of nostalgia. I can tell you this much: If the sequel can make the same leap that Uncharted took for Among Thieves, then Lara’s adventures can find me anytime.

    TREY’S NERD RATING – 8.5

     

    Third Nipple

    *Spoiler Alert* This section talks about a bug that concerns a late-game gear acquisition.

    The bug I encountered is not uncommon; in fact, so many players have encountered it that there are numerous forums and videos dedicated to it already. No one seems to have found a clear pattern on how to avoid it; either it happens to you, or it doesn’t. In its current state, it is game-breaking, as the area you are in cannot be (easily) gotten out of, and reloading a save – or even rebooting the whole game – does nothing to solve it.

    TR Glitch 1

    At one point, you find yourself on a derelict ship deck with no discernible way through; luckily for you, Lara has just acquired an item that allows her to pull heavy objects into new positions. The idea is that you find a weak spot in the deck, then use this gear to swing a crane holding cargo over the area. This lets you shoot the pulley on the crane and drop the cargo through the deck, allowing you to proceed.

    If the glitch gets you, the animation for the crane swinging triggers, but the cargo remains in its original location in mid-air. When the crane reaches the spot above the deck, the pulley snaps, and you actually hear the sound effects that indicate the cargo has fallen through the weak point. The cargo hasn’t moved, though, and the placeholder graphics for the deck remain intact, barring your passage.

    TR Glitch 2

    I spent half an hour trying to figure things out, and finally took to the web. What I eventually found was a video solution that made use of another glitch. I called the weak spot “placeholder graphics” because that’s exactly what they are, to the point where everything that’s not Lara herself – arrows, bullets, grenades, etc – can pass right through them. The solution I found involved positioning Lara at exactly the right spot between the deck and this placeholder. If you do it just right, she goes into her falling animation, because as far as the game is concerned she is falling. If you can keep her hovering there long enough, she slowly sinks past the placeholder and falls through to the corridor below. When you look back up, the deck appears broken, and you can climb freely between the two areas as intended.

    I have numerous rants on this subject, but I condensed it to this: There’s no way this got past QA, which means that they caught it, but the underlying issues were too big to try and fix without delaying launch. Instead, the team released an unusually large (23 MB!) day-one patch to try and fix the problem.

    But what about people who don’t have the internet on their console; while I know I’m usually not a big supporter of that group, this annoys me on their behalf for some reason. Probably because I do have internet, and got the patch, and still got screwed. What if I had been playing more frequently those first days after launch, before the issue became well-documented online? I would have had to restart my whole playthrough, and just crossed my fingers that it wouldn’t happen again.

    In the end, the glitch genuinely did not affect my final score, which is a testament to how much fun the rest of the game was.

  • Tomb Raider Has 1 Million Playing Already

    Photo courtesy stuff.co.nz
    Photo courtesy stuff.co.nz

    It appears that [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] is officially a hit.

    Crystal Dynamics has announced that one million people were playing Lara Croft’s newest adventure only two days after launch. I am sure this gives a sigh of relief to the development team that worked so hard on this game for over three years.

    I am going through Tomb Raider now and can say, without a doubt, that it was well worth the wait. Our review will be coming soon.

     

  • Tomb Raider Movie Will Closely Resemble New Game

    Photo courtesy thealistdaily.com
    Photo courtesy thealistdaily.com

    The new [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] releasing today on Playstation 3, Xbox 360 and PC isn’t the only reboot of Lara Croft happening. GK Films purchased the rights to produce a new movie based on the game heroine and they are already hard at work with Crystal Dynamics on bringing Lara back to the big screen.

    Crystal Dynamics studio head Darrell Gallagher talked about their relationship with GK Films and how the new Tomb Raider game is influencing the production:

    “They are working from this new take that we’ve given them. It’s a good partnership. We’re seeing the challenges through the same lens.

    It was important for both of us to have a cohesive version of the franchise. We didn’t want to see a film version that was a continuation of the old Tomb Raider films.”

    I think we just all breathed a sigh of relief. A more, gritty version of Lara, who is still early in her development as a adventurer, should make for a much better adventure than the previous two that starred Angelina Jolie when she was still super hot and before all the stealing adoption of African children.

    I will go ahead and nominate Camilla Luddington, who portrayed Lara’s digital version in the Tomb Raider game.

    CamillaLuddington2

    Yeah, I would pay ten bucks to watch her for 90 minutes. Then go see a movie with her in it.

     

  • It Is Never Too Early For Tomb Raider Cosplay

    All photos courtesy geektyrant.com
    All photos courtesy donttellme.deviantart.com

    We here are counting down the days until this Tuesday when Crystal Dynamics’ reboot of [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] is finally released on the world. The good people over at Geek Tyrant are making the wait a little bit easier by finding this set of cosplay photos for Lara’s newest adventure.

    The cosplay comes courtesy of Alexa Karii who really does the character justice in her photo set. Go and check out her other cosplay sets on her DeviantArt page and leave a nice comment for all the hard work.

    TombRadierNew_Cosplay_4

    TombRadierNew_Cosplay_2

    TombRadierNew_Cosplay_3

  • Tomb Raider: The Final Hours Reaches Its Final Video

    Photo courtesy videogamers.com
    Photo courtesy videogamers.com

    It is finally time to see the last video in the Tomb Raider: The Final Hours series. Over the past six months the series has introduced us to the actors portraying the characters, the creation of the unique music, the first hands-on for the public at San Diego Comic-Con and last time, the immense strain that the developers felt as they tried to finish final bug testing on their way to release.

    This final video has host Zachary Levi interviewing the department heads on this final run until the game gets into the hands of gamers. Crystal Dynamics has done a great job with the lead up to the game and its time is almost here.

    [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] releases on March 5th.

  • Tomb Raider ‘Reborn’ Trailer

    Photo courtesy techcentrail.co.za
    Photo courtesy techcentrail.co.za

    We are less than a week away from the release of Tomb Raider and Crystal Dynamics and Square are in full-on promotion mode with commercials everywhere you look. Now they have released a new trailer for the game titled “Reborn”. In it footage is shown from the game while many different people name off their strengths as Lara Croft. The stand out in the trailer has to be music which I can only hope is from the soundtrack because it is quite goosebump inducing.

    [amazon_link id=”B004FS8LYK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tomb Raider[/amazon_link] releases on March 5th.