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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend (PSP)
 
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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend (PSP)

by Eidos
Platform:   Sony PSP
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
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Game Information

  • Platform:   Sony PSP
  • PEGI Rating: Ages 12 and Over
  • Media: Video Game

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this item with Tomb Raider: Anniversary (PSP) by Eidos

Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend (PSP) + Tomb Raider: Anniversary (PSP)
Price For Both: £19.21

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Product Features

  • Lara comes to life - the dual-pistol, wielding adventurer's polygon count and animation set has been increased significantly, presenting Lara in the finest fidelity to date
  • Return to the Tombs: Lara's new quest brings her to lost ancient realms that guard Secrets of the Past
  • Fluid movement: the revamped control system provides intuitive and fluid character movement
  • Dynamic animation system puts focus on continuous motion, giving Lara the ability to seamlessly handle any obstacle and interact dynamically with any surface
  • Move and shoot. Lara uses her physical prowess to combine gunplay with unique signature moves
  • Variety of player choice - intelligently use the environment, technical gear and weapons to overcome challenging situations
  • Physics, Water and Fire systems bring the perilous environments of Lara's world alive, and challenge the player to improvise solutions to obstacles
  • Visit a vast array of cinematic & exotic locations including ancient tombs, dangerous jungles, snowy mountain ruins and numerous unexpected surprises in between

Product details

  • Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered.
  • ASIN: B000EJIYRI
  • Release Date: 9 Jun 2006
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,565 in PC & Video Games (See Bestsellers in PC & Video Games)

    Popular in this category:

    #37 in  PC & Video Games > Sony PSP > Games > Action & Shooter

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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend (PSP)

Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend (PSP)

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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

In a nutshell:
Lara Croft is finally back in the first game to do her legacy justice since the days of the original PlayStation. With updated graphics and gameplay, and a whole new suite of moves and equipment this is the sequel fans have always demanded.

The lowdown:
After the disappointment of Angel of Darkness, the Tomb Raider series has gone back to basics with a new developer and even a new Lara. Combat is back to being only around a third of the game with everything else centred on platform jumping and puzzle solving. To help this, there’s a canny new movement system that allows Lara to jump onto and grab objects at an angle, so there’s none of the awkward grid based movement of the earlier games. This is also the first Tomb Raider to have a proper physics engine, with lots of the puzzles revolving around movement and the use of Lara’s natty new magnetic grappling hook. The graphics are also excellent, and with input from the original creator this is a long awaited return to form.

Most exciting moment:
The realisation that this is actually a proper update of the original game, as Lara leaps around cliffs like a mountain goat, with graphics and controls that aren’t still stuck in 1996.

Since you ask:
The new voice of Lara is provided by Keeley Hawes, who also plays Zoe Reynolds in BBC TV show Spooks.

The bottom line:
Lara Croft is back in the first decent new Tomb Raider game for a long time.
Harrison Dent



Product Description

Gaming`s most famous heroine makes her triumphant return in Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend! Traveling to several continents in search of a mystical ancient artifact, Lara Croft is pitted against corrupt forces led by a figure from her past...long thought dead

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Bad translation to PSP, 28 Nov 2006
Fun:2.0 out of 5 stars 
I agree that Legend is the best Tomb Raider game since TR3 but it also highlights just how bad the PSP analogue controller really is. I just about got used to it (although the lack of control is massively irritating) but I almost gave up when it came to defeating the first boss (in Japan). There's a difference between a game being entertainingly difficult and being just badly designed and this is the latter. Just why the analogue controlled is the ONLY way to control Lara is a mystery. The PC version works well just be using keys.
This is fundamentally a very good game- it's just the weak and lazy transfer to PSP that lets it down.
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25 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Can Lara make a comeback after AOD?, 13 April 2006
Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
It's been almost 10 years since the first Tomb Raider was released, and while video games have come a long way since then, the Tomb Raider series hasn't kept pace. Problems such as clunky controls and a frustrating camera, which were excusable in the early games, have steadily degraded the quality of the series releases over time. The latest installment, Tomb Raider: Legend, finally brings the series into the 21st Century while staying true to the adventurous spirit of the early games.

Tomb Raider: Legend follows the exploits of Lara Croft as she tries to solve the mysteries of her past. Specifically, she's investigating the death of her mother several years earlier. One thing leads to another and somehow the legend of King Arthur becomes involved, along with a magical sword that has been broken into fragments and scattered throughout the world. The story is barely coherent, but it serves its purpose in that it gives Lara an excuse to travel from one exotic locale to the next in search of these artifacts. The game takes you to places such as Ghana, Peru, Tokyo, England, and Kazakhstan, and all of the locations look great. And while Lara sticks mostly to tombs and ruins, she also spends time exploring a deserted research facility, hopping about atop skyscrapers, and shooting up bad guys in a rustic village. The variety of levels is great, although you'll end up seeing pretty much the same platforming and box-pushing puzzles wherever you go.

The puzzles in Tomb Raider: Legend can be a bit deceptive at first, but once you learn how the game works, the puzzles become very simple. Most of the game is spent solving basic switch puzzles as you work your way through each level in search of the next artifact. Aside from dragging around boxes to weigh down switches or jam traps, there are a lot of fun platforming sections that let you take full advantage of Lara's affinity for high-flying acrobatics. You can hang on ledges, swing on ropes, swing between platforms (via a magnetic grapple), and vault off conveniently placed beams. The controls are a lot more fluid and responsive than they have been in previous Tomb Raider games, which makes Lara movements feel much more natural than before. The controls are precise, but not punishingly so. You often only have to jump in the general direction of the next platform and the game will compensate by automatically connecting Lara to the intended surface. Once you get the hang of it you can effortlessly overcome even the most imposing obstacles without difficulty. It's also always abundantly clear which ledges you can hang on or jump between, so the only challenge is positioning the camera so you can see where you're trying to go, which can be frustrating. In tight spots it can be difficult to get a good view of the ledge you need to jump to, and sometimes it's easy to misjudge a jump if you don't have the camera aligned just right. The camera problems are intermittent though, and most of the time you have a fairly good view of the surroundings. And even though the platforming is fairly easy, it's still satisfying thanks to some great-looking animations and level designs that convey an excellent sense of peril.

Of course, Lara is skilled with weapons and is more than willing to serve up some hot lead when the situation calls for it. You'll have to shoot up plenty of generic enemy goons and a few leopards here and there. You can lock on to an enemy by holding a button, and then you mash the fire button until the enemy is dead. You can also throw grenades, as well as perform slide tackles or aerial assaults. When you run up to an enemy, you can jump off his head and flip through the air in slow motion while shooting him. It's a neat effect, but not especially useful or necessary, since it takes more time to get in close to an enemy than it does to just blast him from afar. Sometimes you can shoot at certain objects in the environment, which are clearly indicated with a large button icon. You can shoot barrels to blow them up, shoot stone pillars and watch them fall on enemies, and initiate all kinds of other scripted events. The gunplay is not that fun though, because it's easy and because the guns don't feel powerful or distinct at all.

Aside from solving puzzles and indiscriminately killing enemies, there are a few other activities you can partake in. There are two motorcycle levels where you have to hop on an improbably placed Ducati and speed after other vehicles while shooting wave after wave of mobile enemies and catching air off jumps. The motorcycle physics are very loose, and the riding sections in Legends feel more akin to a rail shooter than a racing game. There are a handful of interactive cutscenes that require you to press a certain button as an icon appears on screen, much like the cutscenes in Resident Evil 4. And like Leon Kennedy, Lara can meet her demise in many different ways with some crazy death sequences that you get to see if you fail to hit the right button at the right time.

On your first play through, you can easily beat the game in less than seven hours on the default difficulty setting. You can then go back through and play again on a higher difficulty, but it doesn't make much of a difference because the challenge in Legend comes from the puzzles, and those never change. Once you've figured out how to solve each puzzle, the only challenge left is to find all the hidden items in each level or to replay each level in time-trial mode. You can unlock new outfits, movies, models, and so on, but even with all that, you can easily see all this game has to offer in a single weekend.

Tomb Raider: Legend is a good return to the roots of the series. It doesn't do anything new or different, but it has a great blend of action and adventure that will always keep you moving and interested. The problem is that it moves a bit too fast, and it's all over way too soon.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What a disappointment - stick with the original, 9 Jul 2006
By Mr. R. A. Williams "Rob W" (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Fun:2.0 out of 5 stars 
This game promises so much and yet the designers have messed up on all the basics while trying to get back to the basics of the original game. Jumping for example is really really hard - there's no slow walk facility to enable you to line up your jumps. The camera also, is hard to use and does not help you easily trying to see the game environment from different angles.

I'm not sure if other users have had this problem but I've found picking up objects and the pushing action to be really tempramental and it seems like there is occassional button failure with these two actions.

On a plus the game does look and feel a bit like the original and you can see they've tried to get back to the tombs but the poor control interface makes this game a massive disappointment. A real missed opportunity.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Truly a "Legend"
This is the first Tomb Raider game I have ever played and I must admit I am enjoying it. After seeing the movie, I decided I need to play at least one of these games. Read more
Published 4 months ago by B. Lawson

5.0 out of 5 stars Mr Peter Vickers
A really fun game, which has you going all over the world in search of Excalibur. The only downer is a few frame-rate issues. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Mr. Peter G. J. Vickers

5.0 out of 5 stars Now This Is A Legend
Lara has got more for us on the PSP and it's great must buy this now 10/10
Published on 25 Jun 2007 by Gamejunkie

5.0 out of 5 stars Sorry I am late but i did think it was great
I always liked lara croft games but in the past never really knew what to do and could never complete them. Read more
Published on 9 May 2007 by K.M

3.0 out of 5 stars Hard to control
Graphically the PSP version isn't as good as the Xbox version but from the little I've seen is on par with the PS2. Read more
Published on 11 Jun 2006 by master po

5.0 out of 5 stars Lara's Back!!!
I have always loved the Tombraider games (sad I know but true!!). I have to admit that of all the games I have enjoyed this one the most. Read more
Published on 10 May 2006 by Mrs. S. E. Towers

5.0 out of 5 stars lara is back.And better than ever!!!
tomb raider legend sees lara go back to her roots after the disaster that was angel of darkness.This new game features much improved physics engine and a whole new control... Read more
Published on 23 Mar 2006 by TOMMY VERCETTI

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