Feral Interactive just confirmed that the 2013 Tomb Raider reboot is coming to iOS and Android on February 12, and they’re not holding anything back. The mobile port includes the full campaign plus all 12 DLC packs, so no nickel-and-diming for costume bundles or that one extra Challenge Tomb. You’re getting the complete origin story of Lara Croft battling her way through Yamatai’s traps and cultists, exactly as it played on consoles over a decade ago.
Feral is billing this as “the first fully-fledged modern Tomb Raider” to hit mobile, which, given their track record porting Alien: Isolation, GRID Autosport, and ROME: Total War to touchscreens, is a promising pitch. They’re promising “AAA visuals” with optimization presets that let you prioritize frame rates or eye candy depending on whether you’re running this on a three-year-old phone or a current-gen iPad.
For inputs, you get a customizable touchscreen layout, full gamepad support, keyboard-and-mouse on iPadOS and Android tablets, and even gyroscopic aiming if your device supports it. That’s more control options than some actual PC ports bother shipping with, and it suggests Feral knows exactly who’s buying this, not just phone gamers but also the retro handhelds crowd.
Android users need version 13 or later, with 12.5GB of free space (though Feral recommends double that to avoid install failures). iOS players need 16.1GB installed and around 20GB free during download. There’s no official device compatibility list yet, but community chatter suggests you’ll want a Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 or newer with at least 6GB RAM to run smoothly. Feral typically blocks purchases on unsupported hardware, so if the store lets you buy it, it should theoretically work.
Pricing sits at $19.99, with preorders already live on the App Store and pre-registration open on Google Play. That’s a premium ask by mobile standards, but it’s also a complete AAA game with zero microtransactions, which feels wholesome in 2026. Early reactions have been enthusiastic, with at least one commenter declaring Feral “always a goat” for actually remembering Android exists.
Source: Feral Interactive
