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Tomb Raider 1-3 Remastered review – you were never going to smooth these games out

These classic games remain as ingenious, memorable and frustrating as ever.

Games can be beautiful because they are timeless, but they can also be beautiful because they are timely. When it comes to timelessness, you’re going to struggle to beat Tetris. Its stark and nested blocks face every age with the same eternal silence, while the impulse to organise and tidy that they inspire is so deeply rooted in living things that it probably transcends species. Just this morning I watched a crow on TikTok working a stick into a clear plastic tube to dislodge a treat. This crow, that lives in a tree somewhere and probably eats the eggs of other birds because it is compelled to, this crow was ready for Tetris.

Tomb Raider 1-3 Remastered reviewPublisher: AspyrDeveloper: Aspyr/Crystal Dynamics/Core Design (original)Platform: Played on SwitchAvailability: Out 14th February on PC, Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox One and Xbox X/S.

For timeliness, though, I give you Tomb Raider – the early Core games. These are the same games that have just been repackaged and remastered in a new collection with an annoyingly unwieldy name. And that all fits, to be honest. To play these games is to play – if you’re me – something gorgeous and awkward, something that is gorgeous in part because it is awkward. But the timeliness of it all! I cannot even see these games without slipping back to the 1990s. Scream is on at the cinema. My ex-girlfriend is back from a gap year in Australia and keeps saying everything good is “immense”. Everyone I know seems to have bought the same record bag to university. Chocolate bars are going through a great Cambrian explosion (forget Snickers, pick me up a Maverick!), and in every halls of residence there is at least one grubby grey plastic PlayStation, sat upside down so the laser works, with people clustered around Lara Croft’s latest. They’re stuck on a puzzle. They’re playing together, as a kind of chorus. They’re calling out suggestions. They’ve all missed the key that is hidden on the floor behind them.

A warning for what follows, then. Tomb Raider isn’t just a game to some of us. It’s a madeleine, my Maverick bar, dunked in Lucozade, which takes me back to the time that I was rediscovering games in general. And this time is now so distant, these games such a fond but unplayed fixture of my imagination, that just playing this collection is an act of rediscovery itself, by turns thrilling and melancholy, joyous and frustrating.

The good is very good. Someone cared about this collection. It contains the first three Core games, which to me are the classic texts of this era of Tomb Raider. Tomb Raider 1 sets it all up, starting with those wolves and that ice and then delivering an adventure with levels that seem to grow in complexity and ambition as the developers understand the potential they’re working with. Then Tomb Raider 2 is my favourite Tomb Raider game, because it’s already restless.

Tomb Raider 2! What I love about this game is that, sure, the treasured object you’re chasing after is very old – I should say here that the remasters rightly carry a content warning about the racial and ethnic stereotypes they include, and this game’s 1990s treatment of Chinese mythology is about as engaged as you’d fear – yet so much of the game sees you Indiana Jonesing through places which are not actually ancient, but are still harmonious with that kind of numinous scale a certain adventure fiction finds in old temples and mysterious dormant machinery. You get an oil rig, a Venetian opera house, a sunken trawler! Rust and industrialisation, and it works! Tomb Raider 3, meanwhile, builds on everything the first games have and dials it up – much too far in crucial respects. As IGN noted today, the game’s treatment of South Pacific islanders includes tribesmen “implied to be cannibals” who use blowguns and issue “animal-like cries as they are defeated.” Crystal Dynamics ultimately decided to leave these stereotypes in “in the hopes that we may acknowledge its harmful impact and learn from it.”