There is a very particular kind of magic that comes from watching a classic get the treatment it truly deserves—not just a fresh coat of paint, but a ground-up rebuild that respects what made it special while making it feel brand new. That is exactly what Crystal Dynamics, Flying Wild Hog, and Amazon Game Studios are aiming for with Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis, and after years of quiet teases and speculation, we finally know when Lara Croft’s reimagined debut is dropping: February 12, 2027.
Wait, 2027? If you are doing a double-take, you are not alone. When Legacy of Atlantis was first unveiled at The Game Awards in December 2025, the plan was to ship it sometime in 2026 to help celebrate the franchise’s 30th anniversary. But during Sony’s State of Play presentation in June 2026, the teams confirmed the game had been pushed to February 12 of the following year, with a surprise addition: it is also coming to Nintendo Switch 2 alongside PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam. Pre-orders are already live, so if you are the type to lock in your copy early, you can go ahead and reserve your spot right now.
So what exactly are we getting here? This is not another remaster like the excellent Tomb Raider I-VI Remastered collections that have kept fans busy over the past couple of years. Legacy of Atlantis is being billed as a full reimagining of Lara’s 1996 origin story, built from scratch in Unreal Engine 5. Think of it less like a simple HD upgrade and more like a complete reimagining that keeps the soul of the original intact. The classic platforming, puzzle-solving, and that unforgettable T-rex encounter are all making a comeback, just rendered with the kind of visual fidelity that makes you appreciate how far gaming hardware has come.
The narrative is sticking close to what fans remember, but expanding it. Lara is hunting for a powerful artifact tied to the lost civilization of Atlantis, which should sound familiar to anyone who spent weekends in the late ’90s guiding blocky polygons through ancient tombs. This time around, the storytelling is getting more room to breathe, and Alix Wilton Regan is returning to voice Lara Croft, a nice bit of continuity for fans who have followed the more recent entries.
What makes this project especially interesting is the development partnership. Crystal Dynamics is obviously the studio most synonymous with modern Tomb Raider, but they are co-developing this one with Flying Wild Hog, the Polish team best known for their work on Shadow Warrior and the recent Evil West. It is an unexpected pairing, but one that makes sense when you think about it. Flying Wild Hog has a knack for fast, kinetic action and atmospheric world-building, while Crystal Dynamics holds the keys to Lara’s DNA. Together, they are trying to thread the needle between nostalgic reverence and modern game design.
And honestly, the timing feels right. The past few years have been a bit of a renaissance for Lara Croft. We got the remasters of the first six games, which introduced a new generation to the classics, and now Legacy of Atlantis is poised to bridge that nostalgia with a contemporary audience that might have never experienced the original. Meanwhile, Amazon is not stopping there. The publisher also has Tomb Raider: Catalyst slated for 2027, which is the true next-gen sequel that takes Lara to northern India in what is being described as the most expansive entry in the series yet. So if you are a fan, 2027 is looking like an embarrassment of riches.
There is something almost poetic about returning to where it all began. The original Tomb Raider did not just launch a franchise; it helped define an entire genre and proved that a strong, capable female lead could carry a blockbuster action game. Legacy of Atlantis is carrying that weight, and the pressure is on to deliver something that honors the past without feeling stuck in it. From what we have seen so far, the teams seem aware of the stakes. The emphasis on exploration, the promise of expanded storytelling, and the sheer visual power of Unreal Engine 5 all suggest this is more than a nostalgia trip.
For now, the wait just got a little longer, but if the extra months in the oven mean a tighter, more polished experience, most fans will probably take the delay in stride. February 2027 is not that far off in the grand scheme of things, and if Legacy of Atlantis manages to capture that sense of wonder and danger that made the original so memorable, it could end up being the definitive way to experience Lara’s first adventure. Keep an eye on those pre-order listings if you want in on day one, and maybe dust off your old save files while you wait.
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