Shadow of the Tomb Raider Review - IGN (2024)

A bigger world, higher stakes, and an unexpected spin on Lara Croft’s character make Shadow of the Tomb Raider the most ambitious of the modern trilogy. There’s a lot going on here, but it manages to keep most of its balls in the air throughout its 25-odd-hour running time. As both a rollicking, horror-kissed action-adventure and an introspective story about obsession and family, Shadow of the Tomb Raider works as a powerful finale to this particular chapter of Lara’s history.Shadow of the Tomb Raider tells a great story that continues the series’ tradition of high-concept, Indiana Jones-style mumbo jumbo. This time it’s centered around an impending apocalypse and the search for the ancient item that can prevent it that propels Lara through the dark guts of South America. Moments of big, blockbuster-style scripted action return; skin-of-your-teeth action sequences that hurtle Lara across crumbling earth and bullet-peppered buildings, and feel like wonderfully orchestrated roller-coaster rides. It’s a ton of fun.

Beneath that, though, the nature of obsession is once again the well-crafted underlying theme. It’s Lara who is obsessed this time, of course, and while the first act suggests a descent into narcissism (which could get tedious across 25 hours), her character is handled with a lighter touch. Lara isn’t so much narcissistic as awkward and introverted, only really comfortable when alone in her dangerous element. It’s a surprising and delicately-told development for the character and adds a shade of warm humanity that was not there in 2013’s Tomb Raider or 2015’s Rise of The Tomb Raider (and certainly not in this year’s dud of a film adaptation).

Shadow of the Tomb Raider also skillfully hits all the emotional moments needed to satisfyingly wrap up Lara’s quest that began in 2013. Her obsession is put into question, but we’re also reminded of the reasons behind it. A playable flashback sequence, in particular, does a wonderful job at illustrating Lara’s home life before she became a cold-blooded killer, and adds more poignancy to the finale.

It helps that Lara’s voice actress, Camilla Luddington, treads the tightrope between the vulnerable and the ridiculous with such ease. The tonal jumps the script demands might be jarring in lesser hands, but Luddington manages to convey empathy and introspection in one breath while believably talking about a magical artefact that can ‘remake the world’ in another. She’s well supported by series veteran Earl Baylon’s Jonah, who is her only regular confidant this time around. Jonah has always been a reliable voice of reason to Lara’s flights of fancy, but he, too, evolves in this iteration and the subtle shifts in their dynamic are fun to watch.

Powerful Puzzling

For the most part, however, Lara spends her time alone. The actual practice of tomb raiding takes the front seat here, and story missions feature fewer firefights than the past two games and more lonely traversal across cavernous, ancient architecture. In this regard, it feels more in step with the spirit of the original Tomb Raider games of the 90s and early 2000s, and it was a joy to feel so small and insignificant among such beautifully crafted spaces.

Perhaps more significantly, Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s impressive world features the best puzzles in the series. Its puzzle-based story missions, optional crypts, and nine challenge tombs are giant, intricate affairs where ideas are rarely reused, forcing you to figure out their rules afresh each time. Whether it be ‘light four mirrors’ or ‘climb this spindly tower of death’ or ‘explore a giant freighter’, each one has its own mechanics and personality and, most importantly, is genuinely tough. A number of times I thought I’d exhausted all options before adjusting my thinking just a little, only to have the solution snap into place.

To make things even more challenging (or easier, should you have trouble) you can adjust the difficulty independently across the three main styles of gameplay: puzzle solving, environment navigation, and combat. Whenever I felt Lara’s voiceover or environment highlights were being too instructive and giving me clues to mysteries I’d rather solve myself I would up the difficulty and really lose myself inside the maniacal creations of developer Eidos Montreal.

The tombs deliver a wonderfully eerie atmosphere too. An omnipresent cult, an unnerving, string-based score, and an aggressive subterranean enemy type, The Yaaxil, mean Shadow of the Tomb Raider frequently feels like a horror game, which makes for wonderfully tense exploration as you wade through mountains of bodies or hear an animalistic growl in the distance. Once again, there’s that clever homage being paid to the 1996 original; in this instance to its weird, psychedelic heart.

Lara’s new overhang and rappel abilities give her a gratifyingly diverse set of movement options. Her rappel, in particular, allows for level design that’s much more vertical than anything this young Lara has seen before. The simple act of moving from one area to another is often a dizzying mix of up and down and side to side; swinging from one wall to another, catching yourself with your pickaxe at the very last second with animations that convincingly convey her struggle to hang on for dear life.

Swimming in large, three-dimensional environments is also, surprisingly, not too bad, thanks to tight controls that a handful of puzzles capitalise on. Though the fear of drowning is real, I never felt like I was being overly punished by turning in the wrong direction - a staple of all underwater levels - and instead felt tension rather than frustration.

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What a Wonderful World

The world built around these tombs is much bigger than anything we’ve seen previously, and that space isn’t just for show. It’s full of intricate hub areas to explore and brimming with life and activity, particularly in the huge Hidden City of Paititi where you will be spending most your time. For the first time in a Tomb Raider game, you can wander around talking to select NPCs, listening to their stories and history and watching their daily rituals. The detail on display here is absolutely stunning, giving the sense of a real, lived-in city.

While I appreciate the character injected into this world, though, the activities you actually do in it aren’t uniformly compelling. Part of that is due to a lack of incentive: crypts and caves are a lot of fun to explore and there’s a great selection of outfits and weapons to find and animals to hunt, but I simply didn’t have a real reason to find them all. Lara is a very capable warrior from the get-go, and her arsenal and skill tree are easily filled just by completing story missions and challenge tombs. There’s no need to go off script and collect more stat-boosting outfits or materials to craft better weapons when it just makes things feel lopsided in your favour. Perhaps a full hard mode playthrough would make those detours feel more justifiable.

For this reason, I feel like Shadow of the Tomb Raider missed an opportunity to really maximise the act of exploration. One of the best parts of the 1996 original was stumbling across a hidden treasure or weapon tucked away in a fabled part of a level that really made a difference to your game, always driving you forward to explore the map in its entirety. By contrast, I’ve found that when such treasure hunting is anything less than vital, that incentive is lost.

It would help if there were greater clarity across the stats for Lara’s equipment, which offers vague description-based boosts like ‘[this bow’s] construction is inspired by the same mechanics as the ancient Atlatl,’ or ‘a powerful pistol that deals high damage’ rather than the numerical systems we are used to seeing in action-RPGs. I don’t expect Destiny-level detail, but it’s hard to really care about chasing a particular outfit or weapon when there’s little clarity on how effectively it will help you - especially if you already have a great tricked-out shotgun.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider also features a greater helping of multi-part sidequests than previous games, and while they offer a more complex look at the inhabitants of these hubs and how Lara interacts with them, they’re not particularly imaginative. Fetch quests and ‘clear the area’ tasks fall short of the imagination found in the challenge tombs, which are also optional but far more enjoyable.

Fighting Quiet

There’s less guns-blazing combat this time around, and while it’s still not particularly novel or revolutionary, Shadow of the Tomb Raider at least mixes up the fighting formula by demanding you take a stealthy approach. Lara is a mere mortal who can be taken down in a handful of hits, so battlegrounds are all about optimising your tactics to do things quietly. Climbable trees make for quiet crouching perches, and Lara now has the ability to hang enemies off branches with her grapple axe, a la Batman, though I didn’t use this ability all that much. It was far more effective to use the tried-and-tested stealth rule of crouching in long grass or against a mud-covered wall and picking guys off silently, and then using a hastily-crafted Molotov cocktail to finish off the rest. Again, this is perfectly fine and I enjoyed it in practice, but it’s not exactly interesting, especially when enemies tend to separate themselves naturally and set themselves up for easy deaths.

One new addition that genuinely freshens up the mix are the plants Lara can eat while on the fly. These give her various temporary status effects like Focus, which is the ability to slow down time while preparing your shot, and Endurance, which temporarily softens enemy blows. These are particularly useful about midway through the campaign when a new, more aggressive enemy type demands quick reflexes and sharp aim. The best fights I had were against wave after wave of these guys, switching between wolfing down plants and using a crunchy shotgun blast up close or a bow shot to pick off those in the distance.

Though there’s no Expedition mode in Shadow of the Tomb Raider, there is a New Game Plus to start after the credits roll on the main story that offers special gear based on the style you want to play (combat, exploration, or stealth). You can still play around in the world after the main story is over, too, and as I finished the story at 66% world completion, there were still plenty of extra tombs to hunt down and side quests to find.

Verdict

With a story that manages to satisfactorily tread the line between high-concept fun and grounded character exploration, Shadow of the Tomb Raider meaningfully wraps up the journey Lara began in 2013 and convincingly leaves her in a place resembling where she was when we were first introduced to her more than 20 years ago. I would have liked a little more incentive to explore the beautiful world Eidos Montreal has created, but I’d much prefer too much content than too little. There’s so much to enjoy elsewhere in a game that’s stuffed to the brim with ideas and devilishly challenging puzzles. I can’t wait to see where Lara goes next.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider Review - IGN (2024)
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