This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Amazon Maximum Age: 20 years Amazon Minimum Age: 144 months Binding: Video Game Brand: Eidos EAN: 0788687200530 ESRB Age Rating: Teen Label: Eidos Interactive Manufacturer: Eidos Interactive Model: 20053 Platform: Xbox 360 Publisher: Eidos Interactive Release Date: October 23, 2007 Sales Rank: 877 Studio: Eidos Interactive
Features:
Solve the Diabolical Machinery of the Past: Seek to outwit the brilliant ancient designers of many epic puzzles and vaults in order to uncover their secrets. Be warned they do not take kindly to meddling, and as such, the price of failure is extreme.
High Definition Visuals & Epic Exploration: Experience a more realistic game world as stunning environments are brought to life through higher resolution visuals and real-time lighting/shadows
Death-Defying Environmental Playground: Leap over massive gaps, cling onto rock ledges, and swim through underground tunnels.
Acrobatic Gunplay: Deftly leap around charging enemies, while you continue to unleash a hail of bullets from your trademark dual pistols.
Lethal Predators: The wilderness awaits with a wide range of bestial predators from wolves to bears to the awesome T-Rex. Enemies feature a more diverse behavior set, providing improved combat challenges.
Product Description: The adventure begins when Lara is hired by a powerful syndicate to retrieve a mythical object called the Scion. As Lara searches ancient tombs and isolated worlds that have lain undisturbed for thousands of years, she discovers that she is not alone. Not only has she awoken their fearsome guardians but there are others desperate to learn the Scion's dark secrets. Celebrate and commemorate ten years of Tomb Raider and Lara Croft with Tomb Raider: Anniversary, a new action adventure inspired by the original Tomb Raider video game, one of the greatest action adventure games of all time.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
Rating: - A decent remake of a great game
Back when I was 16 I played the original Tomb Raider, and when I picked this up, I thought to myself there's no way I could ever remember anything of the original one. I quickly found out that that was definitely not the case. In playing just the first level I found myself saying "Wow, I remember this!" and also found myself astonished by how much prettier the locations were in the game this time around. What was once blocky, lego-land type levels have become (relatively) smooth environments. However, I don't think this game deserves to be reviewed on how nostalgic it is, but by its own merits. So here we go.
By today's standards TR:A is a decent looking game. If you want Bioshock-like graphics out of it, you will be disappointed. That being said, the graphics are still beautiful, the motions fluid, and the frame-rate didn't seem to slow down at any parts that I remember.
On the 360, the controls are very nice and didn't get in the way of my playing the game (until I did the time trials, but more on that later). Lara jumped and grabbed stuff on her own without me needing to anything extra, and I didn't want to chuck the controller at the ground out of frustration. Sometimes the game's controls got a little too helpful though, and Lara aimed herself at things and grabbed ledges that would've been more convenient if she had done what I wanted her to in the first place. But those times were rare in the actual game, as I found this to be more of a problem in the mansion than I did in the other levels.
I should add that I've only had problems with the controls now that I'm attempting to go through the time trial versions of the levels to claim the last few achievements. I know this is likely due to me rushing through parts I should take slower, but there are times when her head and shoulders literally rub against a ledge I want to grab, and she falls to her death.
The only part of the game that I didn't like, and the reasoning for it dropping a star, is that it was too easy, and subsequently a fairly short game. Here, I have to compare it to the original a little, because the original was insanely hard and took forever to get through. The levels in Anniversary were shrunken, watered down versions of the original levels, and this felt a little disappointing. I say a little disappointing, because some of the levels in the original drove me so crazy I had to shut off the computer and walk away for a few days before I came back. So I don't know if making the game easier is all that bad. I don't mind being a little frustrated by games though, and for the most part it was a cake-walk getting through Anniversary. The time-trials are what add the true difficulty of game, and that's what saves the game from being completely too easy. So it balances out a bit from that.
In the end though, I'm very much happy with my purchase of this game. It was a fun remake, even if it was a little easy. Getting the last 100 or so achievements will take me awhile, since they are all attached to the time trials.
One final thing for Xbox 360 players-- I had a glitch in the game happen that was annoying. I was about halfway through the game, and decided as a break, to try the Croft Manor level. I restarted it, out of frustration, and when I did, I lost all of the relics and artifacts I had found, and the game simply forgot that I had completed Peru (and thus I couldn't replay the levels). So I had to delete my save games and start from scratch. While I looked at this as an oppertunity to gain some replay value from the game, I can see how it might tick others off. So complete the Croft Manor (preferably with all the artifacts) before you start the rest of game. That way you don't have to worry about this happening to you. Or just don't restart the level like I did, as that seems to trigger the glitch. It's annoying, but not so much that it made me hate the game, obviously.
Rating: - Jump, Jump, Die, and Start over
This game is very repetitive. I found myself doing the same thing over and over again, almost ready to finish the climb, then slightly jump to the right of where I needed to and die/start over. This game would have been better if the game control was a little more reasonable. Unless you love tomb raider, spend your money on a little more dynamic game with a plot. I thought since it was a classic it would be good, but I did not have the patience to work through this game.
Rating: - For fans AND newcomers... Great fun!
This is one of the best games I've ever played... Why? Simply because Tomb Raider (1996) is the best game I've ever played EVER... The creators at Crystal Dynamics did a great job to get this classic back to life in a greatly fun remake.
The fans will LOVE it since it will bring back memories of their greatest playing experience.
The newcomers will LOVE it too because they will get to play a greatly fun adventure, with a sexy heroine at her BEST look ever... Lara Croft is just THE sexiest video game character ever and in this game, she certainly proves the best she can be!
The graphics are great. The enemies are very well-designed (their AI is notable too). Lara's voice talent is not as good as the previous games' but it certainly is nice acting.
The music is TOPNOTCH. It brings back the main score from the classic game, but renews it in a way that makes it more fresh-sounding but also very interesting; making the game atmosphere mysterious and nostalgic.
Rating: - My Thoughts on Tomb Raider Anniversary
If you were around to enjoy the original Tomb Raider, playing this game is like meeting a girl you thought was hot in junior high, only now you're both in your 30s and she's still just as hot as you remember. As for you, well. The less said, the better.
If you think that's just a questionable metaphor for the character of Lara Croft herself, you may be right, because she does look just as good in this iteration (given today's graphic advances) as we old-timers thought she looked back in '96, triangles and all. I was actually in college when I played the first TR on the PS1, and at the time, I was (along with legions of other gamers and non-gamers alike) smitten with the heroine that helped launch the 3D action-adventure genre. A few increasingly tired sequels...bad movies...and countless 3D action-adventure games later...and the magic was all but gone.
10 years later, this "re-imagining" takes what was great about the original TR (level design, puzzle solving, a great sense of exploration, tight control), and dresses it up in a new coat of paint, adding tweaks here and there for modern sensibilities. It looks a lot better, Lara's got new moves, everything has a bigger sense of scale. Some changes have been made - some for the better, some seemingly for change's sake. Most importantly, the soul - the essence, if you will - of the original TR is here, and that's why I give this game a hearty recommendation. I can think of few other games that deliver a sense of grandeur, danger and giddy pleasure in quite the same way Tomb Raider can when it's firing an all cylinders.
If you're feeling nostalgic, you'll love the developer commentary you can toggle on or off in the option menu, then trigger by activating one of the purple diamonds in the level (they look like the original's save points). If you're a fan, it's pretty interesting to hear Toby Gard, the designer of the original, and Jason Botta, the game director of the new version, go back and forth about the challenges and changes involved with both the original and this remake. If you're the "gotta catch 'em all" type, you'll probably enjoy replaying levels to collect hidden relics and artifacts, finish the time trials (speed runs) and take a run through Croft Manor.
Obviously, as a person who played and enjoyed the original, I'm bringing a lot of mental baggage along. If you're new to the franchise, the experience certainly won't have the same impact, but I suspect you'll still have a grand time anyway. In this day and age of first-person-shooter over-saturation, this game may even come as a breath of fresh air.
Rating: - A good remake - for fans only
The Good:
- It is a remake of one of the most revolutionary games. Crystal Dynamics has done a good job in trying to keep the original gameplay, while bringing in some innovations.
- Graphics are very good. While the 'blurriness' of Legend is gone, the graphics better match the goal of the game and still look very good. Textures are also very good resolution - which I cannot say about Call of Duty 4, for example.
The Bad:
- You cannot save anywhere. Actually - you can - but the only thing you save is the last checkpoint. This becomes a slight frustration starting with the Egypt levels, where Checkpoints are more further apart.
- Difficulty level is a lot higher than the original and actually any of the other TR games. Prepare to die ... a lot. This will not necessarily happen because of you, but because of camera shifting in the last moment or the grapple not catching the hook always, etc. This is a very unforgiving game, so if you easily get frustrated over replaying bits over and over, then maybe this game is not for you.
- There is always one and only one way to do things. This is probably the biggest weakness of this game. For example: in the Atlas level, you can climb a wall to activate a switch, but then - when the boulder starts rolling - you cannot climb the exact same wall, because the designers want you to do something different. Same happens in many other spots. In some levels you cannot catch a ledge until you do something else, even if the ledge is already there, etc.
- Controls, controls, controls ... Maybe I remember this different, but the original - with its square blocks - controlled a lot easier. Legend also felt better and even if Anniversary uses the same, they are not as good for some reason. One thing that is sure to drive crazy everybody playing this game is Lara's hand stand animation. This is an animation that start in some cases when you grab a ledge and try to get on it. For some reason, this animation will kick in almost EVERY TIME when you are in a timed puzzle. I do not know if that is the intention of the developers - to slow you down - or just poor controls, but it gets annoying fast.
The Ugly:
While games like Prince of Persia are evolving and newcomers get it right from first try (Uncharted, for example), the Tomb Raider series is -literally- stuck in the past. While the other games are about exploring great places, TR games continue to be about the 'perfect jump'. Crystal Dynamics should take example from Uncharted, where the game is driven by a great story. Controls never get in the way and it is actually very hard to miss jumps or die because of that. Same with Prince of Persia games. As an old fan of these games, I would really like to see an evolution, if a revolution is too much. Crystal Dynamics has got some things right, but they are still behind.
Conclusion: Despite its problems, if you are a fan, this is a buy. If you are new to this - stay away from it, as the high degree of difficulty will create a lot of frustration.