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OpenTomb — an open-source Tomb Raider 1-5 engine remake

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Table of contents

  1. What is this?

  2. Why is it developed?

  3. Features

  4. System requirements

  5. Supported platforms

  6. Configuration and autoexec files

  7. Installation and running

  8. Compiling

  9. Licensing

  10. Credits

  11. What is this?


OpenTomb is an open-source engine reimplementation project intended to play levels from all classic-era Tomb Raider games (TR 1—5) including TRLE levels. The project does not use any of the original Tomb Raider source code, because all attempts to retrieve sources from Eidos / Core were in vain.

Instead, everything is being developed completely from scratch. However, OpenTomb uses certain legacy routines from unfinished open-source projects such as OpenRaider and VT project (found at icculus.org), plus it incorporates some code from Quake Tenebrae.

All in all, OpenTomb is an attempt to recreate the original Tomb Raider experience, along with contemporary updates, features and additions — to fully benefit from running on modern PCs with powerful CPUs and graphic cards — unlike the original engines, which are getting older. The original engine, on which all classics were based on will turn 20 next year!

  1. Why it's developed?

Many may ask — "Why develop another TR engine clone, while we have fully working Windows builds of TR2-5, and TR1 is perfectly working through DosBox?". The answer is simple - the older the engine gets, the lower the chance it'll be compatible with future systems; but in case of OpenTomb, you can port it to any platform you wish due to usage of many cross-platform libraries.

Other people may ask — "Why we're developing it". If there are already patchers for existing engines, like TREP, TRNG, etc.? The answer is simple — no matter how advanced your patcher is, you are limited by the original binary meaning: no new features, no graphical enhancements and no new structures or functions. You are not that limited with open-source engine.

  1. Features

  • OpenTomb has a completely different collision approach. The Engine uses a special terrain generation algorithm to convert every room's optimized collisional mesh from so-called "floordata", which was a significant limiting factor in the original engine.
  • OpenTomb does not run at fixed 30 FPS, as any old engine did. Instead, variable FPS rate is implemented, just like in any contemporary PC game.
  • OpenTomb uses common and flexible libraries such as OpenGL, OpenAL, SDL and Bullet Physics.
  • Lua scripting is a key feature in OpenTomb, all entity functionality is not hardcoded like it was in the original engines. Lua scripts are game script files which can be modified and extended any time providing the ability to manipulate several OpenTomb level factors.
  • Many abandoned and unused features from originals were enabled in OpenTomb. New animations, unused items, hidden PSX-specific structures inside level files, and so on! Also, original functionality is being drastically extended, while preserving original gameplay pipeline.
  1. System requirements

OpenTomb should run fine on any contemporary computer, but you absolutely need OpenGL 2.1 compliant videocard (with support of VBOs). Also, make sure you have latest drivers installed for your videocard, as OpenTomb may use some other advanced OpenGL features.

  1. Supported platforms

OpenTomb is a cross-platform engine — currently, you can run it on Windows, Mac or Linux. No mobile ports have been made yet, but they are fully possible.

  1. Configuration and autoexec files

Currently, all settings in OpenTomb are managed through configuration and autoexec files. Configuration file contains persistent engine and game settings, while autoexec contains any commands which should be executed on engine start-up.

Configuration file (config.lua) is divided into different sections: screen, audio, render, controls, console and system. In each of these sections, you can change numerous parameters, which names are usually intuitive to understand.
Autoexec file (autoexec.lua) is a simple command file which is executed at engine start-up, just like you type them in the console. Basically, you shouldn't remove any existing commands from autoexec, as most likely engine won't start properly then, but you can modify these commands or add new ones — like changing start-up level by modifying setgamef() command.

  1. Installation and running

You don't need to install OpenTomb, but you need the classic TR game resources for the specifc games you'd like to play within OpenTomb. Problem is, these resources (except level files) tend to be in some cryptic formats or are incompatible across game versions. Because of this, you need to convert some game resources by yourself or get them from somewhere on the Net. Anyway, here is the list of all needed assets and where to get them:

  • Data folders from each game. Get them from your retail game CDs or Steam/GOG bundles. Just take data folder from each game's folder, and put it into the corresponding /data/tr*/ folder.

    An example level path is: "root/data/tr1/data/level1.phd". Where "root" is the folder containing OpenTomb.exe. GOG versions may have these files in a separate file called GAME.GOG. This can be simply renamed to GAME.ISO then mounted as a standard ISO file revealing the "/DATA/" folders.

  • CD audio tracks. OpenTomb supports OGG audiotracks (for TR1/TR2), CDAUDIO.WAD file (for TR3), PCM and MS-ADPCM wave files (for TRLE and TR4/5 respectively). For TR1/TR2, you can convert the original soundtracks by yourself or just download the whole TR1-2 music package here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/fm3qpdhnbzntkml/tr1-2_soundtracks_for_opentomb.zip?dl=0

  • Loading screens for TR1-3 and TR5. For TR3, get them from pix directory of your officially installed game. Just copy or move the pix directory into /data/tr3/ within OpenTomb's folder. As for other games, it's a bit tricky to get loading screens. There were no loading screens for PC versions of TR1-2, and TR4 used level screenshots as loading screens. TR5 used an encrypted format to store all loading screen files. So, to ease your life, you can simply download the loading screen package here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/uycdw9x294ipc0r/loading_screens.zip?dl=0 Just extract these files directly into the main OpenTomb directory, and that should do the trick.

  • If you are looking for the soundtracks and loading screens of only a single Tomb Raider game, you can also download them at opentomb.earvillage.net.

  1. Compiling

To compile OpenTomb, primarily you need libs and defines for these external libraries:

We recommend compiling using CMake. There is a CMakeLists.txt file provided with source code. You can automatically generate Visual Studio, Eclipse and Code::Blocks projects with CMake as well.

On Linux, there is an easy way to compile engine just in three steps. First of all, install all the necessary libraries with this command:

sudo apt-get install libbullet-dev libfreetype6-dev libglu1-mesa-dev libglew-dev liblua5.2-dev libopenal-dev libogg-dev libvorbis-dev libsndfile1-dev libsdl2-dev libsdl2-image-dev

Then, download the code with all third-party submodules:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/opentomb/OpenTomb.git

And then, compile it:

cmake . && make

NB: Please note that OpenTomb requires GNU C++11 extensions (-std=gnu++11) flag to compile properly! You may use CPU-specific optimization flags (-march=prescott, -march=i486, -march=core2), as well as general optimization flags (-O1 and -O2), but DON'T USE -O3 flag, as Bullet tends to crash with this optimization level.

  1. Licensing

OpenTomb is an open-source engine distributed under LGPLv3 license, which means that ANY part of the source code must be open-source as well. Hence, all used libraries and bundled resources must be open-source with GPL-compatible licenses. Here is the list of used libraries, resources and their licenses:

  • OpenGL — does not need licensing (http://opengl3.org/about/licensing/)

  • GLEW — GLEW BSD

  • OpenAL Soft — LGPL

  • libsndfile — LGPL

  • libogg/libvorbis — Xiph BSD

  • SDL / SDL Image — zlib

  • Bullet — zlib

  • Freetype — GPL

  • Lua — MIT

  • zlib — zlib

  • Droid Sans Mono, Roboto Condensed Regular and Roboto Regular fonts — Apache

  1. Credits

NB: Please note that the authors and contributors list is constantly extending! There are more and more developers getting involved in the development of OpenTomb so some recent ones may be missing from this list!

  • TeslaRus: main developer.
  • ablepharus: compilation fix-ups and miscellaneous patches.
  • Cochrane: renderer rewrites and optimizing, Mac OS X support.
  • Gh0stBlade: renderer add-ons, shader port, gameflow implementation, state fix-ups, camera.
  • Lwmte: state fix-ups, controls, GUI and audio modules, trigger and entity scripts.
  • Nickotte: interface programming, ring inventory implementation, camera fix-ups.
  • pmatulka: Linux port and testing.
  • Richard_trle: Github migration, Github repo maintenance, website design.
  • Saracen: room and static mesh lighting.
  • stltomb: general code maintenance, enhancements and bugfixes.
  • stohrendorf: CXX-fication, general code refactoring and optimizing.
  • T4Larson: general stability patches and bugfixing.
  • vobject: nightly builds, maintaining general compiler compatibility.
  • vvs-: extensive testing and bug reporting.

Additional contributions from: Ado Croft (extensive testing), E. Popov (TRN caustics shader port), godmodder (general help), jack9267 (vt loader optimization), meta2tr (testing and bugtracking), shabtronic (renderer fix-ups), Tonttu (console patch) and xythobuz (additional Mac patches).

Translations by: Joey79100 (French), Nickotte (Italian), Lwmte (Russian), SuiKaze Raider (Spanish).

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An open-source Tomb Raider 1-5 engine remake

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