‘We put the most pressure on ourselves’ — Tomb Raider studio head on remaking one of the most iconic games of all time

  • Two Tomb Raider games were announced at The Game Awards 2025
  • This includes Legacy of Atlantis, a remake of the first title in the series
  • Studio head Scott Amos spoke about the pressure of remaking such an iconic entry in a recent interview

The announcement of not one but two new Tomb Raider games was one of the biggest surprises of The Game Awards 2025.

Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis, a remake of the very first game in the series, is coming next year while Tomb Raider: Catalyst, set to launch in 2027. The former will be the first new installment in the series in almost a decade.

Billed as ‘a stunning reimaging’ of 1996’s Tomb Raider, Legacy of Atlantis has a lot to live up to as it seems positioned to bring the series back to its roots after the acclaimed reboot trilogy.

“I think we put the most pressure on ourselves,” explained developer Crystal Dynamics studio head Scot Amos in a recent Q&A session attended by TechRadar Gaming.

“We know as fans what we want […] and everything we do is for the fans,” he continued. “We listen very intently to our fans, to the audiences, to the players.”

“There’s a tremendous pressure to be respectful, but also keep that iconic core that has made this character [of protagonist Lara Croft] enduring for so long.”

According to Amos, the team is driven by a desire “to always be better and better each time to maintain that legacy.”

We’ll have to see how Legacy of Atlantis stacks up against the other Tomb Raider games when it launches for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X and Series S, and PC in 2026.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

The AirPods are Tim Cook’s most underrated achievement

The AirPods changed the direction of true wireless earbuds and became Apple’s most important accessory. | Photography by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge Apple...

Framework is building a better couch keyboard because everyone hates the Logitech one

If you have a wireless keyboard with a touchpad that lets you control your PC from across the room, chances are it's a Logitech...

Framework’s first eGPUs turn its laptop into a desktop PC

Remember when Framework made the first laptop where you can easily upgrade its entire internal video card in three minutes flat? The company's getting...

Framework announces Laptop 13 Pro, ‘the MacBook Pro for Linux users’

Gorilla arm who? | Image: Framework Every time we review a Framework laptop, we find familiar pros and cons. They're truly upgradable, incredibly repairable, but...

X makes it 1,900 percent more expensive to post links

Posting links to X through custom social media software just got a lot more expensive. On Monday, X significantly increased how much it costs...

Framework’s Laptop 13 Pro launch event

Framework CEO Nirav Patel is showing off his company’s latest modular, repairable laptops in San Francisco today. The headliner is the new Laptop 13...

OpenAI’s updated image generator can now pull information from the web

An image generated by ChatGPT Images 2.0. | Image: OpenAI OpenAI is rolling out the latest version of its AI-powered image generator with new "thinking...

AI backlash is coming for elections

Ask Americans how they feel about AI and most say they have concerns. Communities have mounted resistance to data center projects, stalling them across...

Tim Cook was an innovator — just not the Jobs kind

The Cook era comes to a close. | Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images Under Steve Jobs, Apple released the groundbreaking products that...

ISS astronauts are in the middle of a tech overhaul

Even astronauts need to level up their laptops once in a while - including the crew of Expedition 74 on board the ISS, which...