It belongs in my game list!
Lara Croft is a very influential member in the pantheon of gaming. Not the first female protagonist by any stretch of the imagination (I believe that goes to Samus, though I may be wrong) and I don't believe she is the second either. (Zelda from Zelda's Adventure predates her by at least 5 years, although that game was hot trash so we may choose not to count that as an entry.) But still she blazed a path forward for adventure games, presentation and grand globetrotting adventure. I don't know if there was a game which sold the premise of seeing the unseen sights around the our planet's furthest reaches quite as well as Tomb Raider did for it's time. But for all of it's influential medals, Tomb Raider is itself a facsimile. A shadow of a property so famous that it has readily eclipsed the genre it was meant to pay homage to and instead evolved into a roaring, rearing revolution all of it's own. (George Lucas had a habit of being part of projects like that, huh. Just not with 'Strange Magic'. Poor 'Strange Magic'.) Of course, I'm talking about Indiana Jones.
All this time we've known that Lara was at least partly Indiana Jones gender-swapped fan fiction, but in the way we like to in the gaming universe, we accepted her fully as our version of the popular hero. The movies had Indie, we had Lara, an equal split. (Until Nathan Drake showed up to tilt the balance once more, but he's getting a heavily miscast movie in a few months anyway. The balance will correct itself.) But what if I told you that, somewhere along the way, unbeknownst to the annals of time, this delicate cold war slipped further towards the gaming camp with the release of an Indiana Jones game? No, I'm not talking about the crappy 'adventure' titles which were nothing more than reskinned Star Wars bargain bucket time wasters, I mean a real game. One with an original storyline, gameplay, graphics and no legal way to play it in this age because PS2 era game preservation is a myth? Well then I'd be no doubt talking about 'Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb'. (Because I haven't played 'The Infernal Machine'. Oh, I guess there's 'LEGO Indiana Jones' too)
Of course there are the problem moments that any game nearing it's twentieth birthday is going to have on modern audiences, just because that's the way that we can mark the evolution of the industry. (Unless we're talking about Snake Eater. That game will continue to be quality ahead of it's age in a hundred years when it's picked from the ruins of our doomed civilisation by the knobbly grey digits of Alpha Centurians!) And of course I'm talking about the game's attempt to mimic the famous boulder scene from the first movie. Yes, they do it. And yes, it's literally just a copy and paste from those awful Crash Bandicoot chase levels where the camera is fixed in some unhelpful angle and the player is forced to run away and make precise jumps whilst lacking actionable depth perception. Of all the many practices we've lost over the years, this gimmick of action adventure games is one who's passing I loudly celebrate. May it never return to our lands- and of course 'Crash 4: It's about time' has five of them...
Over the years there have been talks of some new Indiana Jones game, there was even one which made it to the advertising stage in the time of the Nintendo Wii, and in fact that game actually released. It was called 'The Staff of Kings'. Unfortunately, in one of the most bizarre occurrences I think I've ever heard of in the gaming world, that advertised game for the PS3 and 360 was never finished, but the ports for the lower gen versions of the game technically were. So you can play the inferior, unfinished lower gen versions of the game but not the prime version that was meant to show all the cutting edge tech like environmental reaction and destruction. How weird. Now, with another Indie game being worked on by Bethesda of all people, we can rest in the knowledge that maybe a good Indiana Jones title might come to the people who have been deprived since 2004. Unless... unless I lied to you earlier, and in 2018 Lucasarts reached into their vaults and pulled the Emperor's Tomb out to sell on GOG and Steam! Hell yeah, you can buy it now for a pittance and I would absolutely recommend it! (Thank Lucas for small miracles...)
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