
Tomb Raider is an excellent action adventure. Voice acting is good throughout, and the ambient effects are great. It's very often a beautiful game, with stunning views and excellent effects. Since the beginning, Tomb Raider games have had great looking environments, and this time is no exception. However, the gameplay overall easily matches that of Uncharted. Lara is much less of a superhero in Tomb Raider, and it feels like she's still learning.Ĭontrols are well implemented for general gameplay, but some of the quicktime events don't feel right. Lara is still great fun to control, but this time she sounds like she's putting much more effort into her climbing and jumping. Once you've got through the opening scenes, which are very exciting, but don't require much skill, Tomb Raider starts to develop. This isn't a game you'll buy for multiplayer, but thankfully the single player more than makes up for it. NVIDIA® nForce™ or other motherboards/soundcards containing the Dolby® Digital Interactive Content Encoder required for Dolby Digital audio.Tomb Raider has an excellent one player campaign, and the obligatory multiplayer tacked on. For the most up-to-date minimum requirement listings, please visit the FAQ for this game on our support website at. These chipsets are the only ones that will run this game. Laptop versions of these cards may work but are NOT supported. Input: Windows-compliant keyboard, mouse, optional controller (Xbox 360® Controller for Windows recommended).Sound Card: DirectX 9.0 or 10.0–compliant sound card (5.1 sound card recommended).DirectX Version: DirectX 9.0 or 10.0 libraries.Graphics: 256 MB DirectX® 10.0–compliant video card or DirectX 9.0–compliant card with Shader Model 3.0 or higher (see supported list)*.

Memory: 1 GB Windows XP/2 GB Windows Vista.Processor: Dual core processor 2.6 GHz Intel® Pentium® D or AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 3800+ (Intel Core® 2 Duo 2.2 GHz or AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ or better recommended).

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