I journeyed through the mountain and found the geothermal valley, where Jacob’s people live. This was a large area to explore, with some parts barricaded off with obtrusive spiked gates. After running some varied errands, including helping to reinforce guard towers, a big battle occurred with helicopters dropping waves of enemies, none of whom seemed to be able to kill Lara. They killed many others, it seems, but that was a pre-ordained conclusion, and I felt no sense of urgency while pushing through the linear path. Indeed, I knew there’d be no progress in action until I reached the next checkpoint, so with the sounds of gunfire and screams of torture around me I frequently went looking for coins or relics I’d passed, or spend time reading random documents left on the path.
While the game is overall relatively coherent, there is a clear distinction between different gameplay types. There are combat sections, exploration sections, and puzzle sections. The last two of these are slightly combined, with the need sometimes to climb on certain things to progress. The second one has the occasional danger from wildlife, but you can tell when this happens because Lara suddenly crouches and moves stealthily rather than just running as usual, and the music suddenly gets all exciting. Similarly, during the combat sections, once you have killed the last enemy, even if you aren’t aware it’s the last one, Lara will suddenly stand upright and the music will finish. At least this meant I wasn’t swimming under the ice for hours waiting to see if anyone was still there to shoot me.
I am compelled to continue through the story, partially because I am intrigued as to what the Divine Source may be, and partially because it will mean that I’ve unlocked all the equipment and abilities and I won’t, for example, spend ten minutes climbing up a wall and jumping between platforms to get to a cave entrance, only to find I need breathing apparatus to swim along the tunnel.
Speaking of which, guess what I’ve got now. I’d better go back and find that cave again.
Anyway, I have travelled into the cathedral and found the atlas, which isn’t a Collins reference book, but instead is a pentagonal dodecahedron which shines light through and projects a map of the city. That shows you where the Divine Source is, and a secret path to get there. Jacob seems to know already. I’ve also met up with Jonah, who was saved from the storms by Jacob’s people, but who was then captured by Trinity. I’m back off now to rescue him from the gulag.