Note that I’ve linked the latest version at the time of writing this (3.0.2), the original 3.0 version with its changelog is available here: https://github.com/LostArtefacts/TR1X/releases/tag/3.0
For a quick rundown of things: Tomb Raider (1996) is the very first game of the critically acclaimed Tomb Raider series made by the late Core Design. Its available to buy on Steam and GOG (as a bundle of the first 3 games), with remastered versions of the first 3 games set to release in Feb. 14, 2024
Unlike the rest of the “classics”, Tomb Raider 1 was a DOS-only application, which is rather inconvenient to get it working; or it would be if the fans didn’t figure out a way to get the TombATI version of the game (a port made for very old ATI cards) working on the modern Windows OSs.
TR1X is made by reverse engineering the aforementioned TombATI version (by employing the methods from a similar project for Tomb Raider 2 named TR2Main, which is also where the previous name Tomb1Main is inspired from), and vastly improves upon it. The changes are far too many to list here, but the highlights include much further drawing distance, TR2+ style controlling for Lara, a New Game+ option, fully customizable gameflow (both for modding and making self imposed challenges), Gold expansion (Unfinished Business) support.
Thanks for making me aware of this project. Maybe I’ll get to play the original game after all. :)
reverse engineering of the said port
BTW, that should be either “the” or “said”. Not both.
No problem at all!
BTW, that should be either “the” or “said”. Not both.
Me when I am not a native English speaker. Should be fixed now, thanks for the heads up!
How do I install it for linux ( steam deck ) ? I got the game.gog file open, but then, I don’t know what to do :/
And the github explains for windows only.
Have you tried extracting everything in game.gog into the folder where you put the TR1X files? From there you only optionally need to download the music (https://lostartefacts.dev/aux/tr1x/music.zip) and put em to the same folder, and then just run TR1X.
While the explanations are indeed more Windows focused, the advanced installation should cover Linux as well.
Thanks, I will try this.