In short, it’s a fully clickable, filterable, zoomable overhead map of every major region in the game. Unlike the static maps you might find on image-hosting sites, the interactive version allows you to toggle exactly what you’re looking for. It’s like having a GPS for every collectible, challenge, and crypt in the hidden city of Paititi and beyond.
Most versions (especially the one hosted on Map Genie) feature the following:
If you have played Shadow of the Tomb Raider, you already know two things for certain: it is a stunning, cinematic conclusion to Lara Croft’s origin trilogy, and it is absolutely massive. From the dense, vertical jungles of the Peruvian Amazon to the submerged ruins of Paititi, the game is packed with hidden caves, challenging tombs, survival caches, relics, and documents. The in-game map is useful for orientation, but it has limitations. It doesn’t track everything you’ve missed, nor does it show you exactly where that last murmur of a monolith is hiding.
Enter the Shadow of the Tomb Raider Interactive Map — a fan-made, web-based masterpiece that turns the daunting 100% completion grind into a strategic, satisfying hunt.
Unfortunately, Eidos-Montréal and Crystal Dynamics never released an official Shadow of the Tomb Raider Interactive Map. The studio relied on the in-game "Guide Mode" (which shows white markers on the ground) to assist players. For hardcore completionists, the community-driven maps are the gold standard.