

The code to enable them still exists in the PC version, though they are not compatible with the majority of modern PC's.


A door was added right after the swimming tutorial, fixing a minor sequence break in which Lara could avoid letting Von Croy cross the bridge, but still trigger the next tutorial cutscene.Von Croy's tutorials can no longer be skipped with the Look button on the PS1.The Statistics screen reads "0 Days" instead of "0Days", although this minor bug only affected the first few levels in previous releases.On the PS1, 7 save slots are available instead of 5 as before.A game over message was added, allowing the player to directly re-load a saved game upon death, instead of being ejected to the title screen.The third version is the final one on the PS1 and the first one on the PC.

Then there's the second one, also exclusive to the PS1 that changes the following: There's the first version, on the PS1 only, with some missing content- oddly, this is the version available for download from the PlayStation Network. It follows the same scheme as the other Tomb Raider games: low polygons, engaging puzzles and crouch-in-corners-to-warp glitches that can be used to go out-of-bounds. The adventure centers around her trying to seal Set again before the world is destroyed. Things quickly go awry as Lara "accidentally" unleashes the evil Egyptian god Set into the world. In the fourth installment of the series, you start as a surprisingly well-developed adolescent Lara Croft on a quest to find the Iris with her mentor. This game has a hidden developer message. Also known as: Tomb Raider IV: The Last Revelation (Germany/Japan)
