Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider Mod APK 1.3.4RC5 [Unlock full content] for Android

Publisher:Feral Interactive    
App Name:Tomb Raider

Editor's Review

Tomb Raider’s Android port is a solid AAA action-adventure I’ve really enjoyed. I explored Yamatai’s ruins, solved puzzles, fought cultists, and watched Lara go from rookie to survivor. It supports touch, controller, gyro aiming, and has all DLC. Runs smooth on good devices but needs Android 13 and lots of space. Perfect for action-adventure fans, puzzle lovers, and anyone wanting a full AAA mobile experience.

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• Fixes a number of minor issues

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Note: This game requires a higher Android version to play. Please download with caution.

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Tomb Raider Official Introduction

Before there was the Tomb Raider, there was Lara Croft; twenty-one years old and shipwrecked on her first archaeological expedition. To escape the mysterious isle of Yamatai, she must push far beyond her limits, leave innocence behind and be reborn a legend.

Explore Yamatai’s ancient ruins, unlock its riddles and fight for survival against its murderous inhabitants.

Tomb Raider for Android is the complete adventure, expertly adapted for mobile. Play it your way, whether using intuitive touchscreen controls, mouse & keyboard, or your favourite gamepad.

TOMB RAIDER COMPLETE AND UNCUT

Lara’s first AAA outing on Android arrives without compromise — packed with exploration, intense firefights, puzzles and Challenge Tombs.

OVERCOME THE ODDS

Unlock skills, hunt for materials, and craft equipment to take Lara from desperate survivor to master adventurer.

UNCOVER A LOST KINGDOM

Discover lost relics and ancient scrolls to unravel the mysteries of Yamatai and the cultists who prowl its depths.

INCLUDES BONUS CONTENT

Tomb Raider for Android comes with 12 DLC packs, including Skills, Weapon Upgrades and a variety of skins for Lara, plus a bonus Challenge Tomb.

TAILORED TO ANDROID

Includes gyroscopic motion-aim on supported devices, as well as optimisation presets for improved performance or visuals.

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Tomb Raider requires Android 13 or later. You need 12.5GB of free space on your device, though we recommend at least double this to avoid initial installation issues.

To avoid disappointment, we aim to block users from purchasing a game if their device is not capable of running it. If you are able to purchase this game on your device then we expect it to run well in most cases.

However, we are aware of rare instances where users are able to purchase the game on unsupported devices. This can occur when a device is not correctly identified by the Google Play Store, and therefore cannot be blocked from purchasing.

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© 2026 Crystal Dynamics group of companies. All rights reserved. TOMB RAIDER, LARA CROFT, CRYSTAL DYNAMICS, the CRYSTAL DYNAMICS logo, EIDOS, and the EIDOS logo are trademarks of the Crystal Dynamics and Eidos Interactive Corp. group of companies. Developed for and published on Android by Feral Interactive Ltd. Android is a trademark of Google LLC. Feral and the Feral logo are trademarks of Feral Interactive Ltd. All other trademarks are the properties of their respective owners. All rights reserved.

Tomb Raider Tips

Tomb Raider on Android: Lara’s Brutal Origin Story Finally Done Right

Lara Croft’s origin story—the one where she’s not the seasoned tomb raider yet, just a young archaeologist stranded on a cursed island—landed on Android a few weeks back, and it’s the full console experience. No cuts, no freemium nonsense. The 2013 reboot that redefined the series is now playable on phones, and honestly, it’s one of the most impressive ports you’ll find on the platform.

You start on the wreckage of the Endurance, a research vessel that goes down during a storm off the coast of Japan. Lara washes up on Yamatai, a mysterious island with a dark history, and from there it’s a brutal fight for survival. You’re not some overpowered action hero here—Lara is fragile, scared, and learning as she goes. The story slowly turns her into the survivor we know today, and that transformation hits just as hard on mobile as it did on consoles a decade ago.

What makes this version work so well is the control scheme. The developers behind the port have done a bunch of these—Alien: Isolation, Grid Autosport—so they know what they’re doing. The touch controls are fully customizable. You can:

Move buttons anywhere on the screen

Resize them so your thumbs don’t miss

Adjust opacity so they don’t block the view

Switch between left‑handed and right‑handed layouts

Gyro aiming is there if you want it, and quick‑time events—usually a pain on touchscreens—got reworked into simple long presses. No frantic tapping required. If you’ve got a Bluetooth controller lying around, the game detects it instantly and hides the on‑screen buttons. Feels just like playing on a console.

Performance is flexible too. The game offers multiple graphics presets. On recent Android phones, you can push for 60fps in Performance mode without the device turning into a hand warmer. Even on the default settings, the island looks atmospheric—rain slicked cliffs, overgrown ruins, and the occasional torchlit cave all hold up well.

Gameplay follows the reboot formula: a mix of third‑person shooting, light survival mechanics, and environmental puzzles. You’ll scavenge resources to upgrade weapons, hunt for salvage to boost Lara’s skills, and explore optional tombs that reward you with permanent gear upgrades. Combat is fast and aggressive, favoring bows and stealth early on, then opening up to shotguns and rifles later. The semi‑open world lets you backtrack to earlier areas once you unlock new tools, so there’s plenty to revisit.

The only omission is the multiplayer mode from the original console release. Not exactly a loss—most people played this game for the single‑player anyway. The entire single‑player campaign is intact, along with all the DLC outfits, weapons, and the extra tomb.

It’s a paid game—no ads, no in‑app purchases. You buy it once and that’s it. For the 10–15 hours of solid action‑adventure you get, it’s a pretty easy recommendation. If you’ve been looking for a real console‑quality game on your phone, this is one of the few that actually delivers.

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