As Tomb Raider begins, Lara is more an academic than an adventurer. But when she’s shipwrecked on an island full of ancient secrets and deadly cultists, she has little choice but to learn how to survive. Lara endures a great deal of punishment early in the game, and though no small amount of that anguish is physical, it’s an unpleasant moment in which a man tries to force himself on her that’s most harrowing. But as unpleasant as it is, it marks an important turning point in Lara’s understanding of just how hard she has to fight to survive. Rather than crumbling under the weight of her physical and emotional struggles, she emerges from them a stronger person.
It’s empowering to witness Lara’s journey from the understandably fearful individual she is when she first arrives on the island to the justifiably confident survivor she becomes. Later in the game, when she has proven to the resident cultists that she’s not the easily cowed person they mistook her for, she turns the psychological tables on them, letting loose battle cries to strike fear into their hearts. Aspects of the story that fall outside of Lara’s character arc aren’t as strong; there’s a twist of sorts that occurs late in the game that you see coming hours ahead of time, for instance, and the central villain offers little in the way of nuance. But as an introduction to the legendary Lara Croft, Tomb Raider’s tale is a success; she emerges as a strong, charismatic and human figure, and you’re left eager to see what the future holds for her.
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