
Turok 3: Shadow of Oblivion Remastered
Nightdive rescues the rarest entry in the N64 Turok trilogy from cartridge-only obscurity - a brisk, dual-protagonist FPS that plays cleaner than it has any right to, even if the source material was always the weakest of the three.
GamerScout Verdict
Best for Turok trilogy completionists and retro FPS fans who want a short, clean boomer shooter - newcomers should start with entries one or two.
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About Turok 3: Shadow of Oblivion Remastered
I went in expecting dinosaurs and got a cosmic horror cult, a grappling hook, and a sibling drama that wraps up in roughly four hours. That is Turok 3 in a nutshell - it swings hard away from the series identity and lands somewhere genuinely strange, for better and worse. The good news is that Nightdive's restoration work is, once again, impeccable. Because the original was N64-exclusive with no PC version to pull from, the team had to reverse-engineer the entire game from the cartridge itself and rebuild it inside their proprietary KEX Engine. The result runs buttery smooth, supports up to 4K at 120 FPS, and adds dynamic shadows, ambient occlusion, and bloom that the hardware of 2000 could never have touched. Textures were upscaled by hand, not AI, with artists tracking down original source files wherever possible. It looks like a late-90s shooter lovingly cleaned up, not a lazy upscale. The dual-protagonist setup is the most interesting mechanical wrinkle here. You pick either Danielle or Joseph Fireseed at the start, and while they share most of the same five-chapter campaign - moving from a ruined city through a military complex, into the Lost Land jungle, and finally to Oblivion's Quake-flavored headquarters - their toolkits differ in ways that genuinely change how you read the levels. Danielle brings an Energy Grapple, explosive arrows, and a minigun, and can leap over obstacles that stop Joseph cold. Joseph carries sniper rifles and silenced pistols, can crawl through tight gaps, and leans toward a quieter approach. Neither playstyle is dramatically different in practice, but running the campaign twice to catch what you missed is a reasonable ask for a game this short. Collecting life force scattered across levels to permanently boost your health pool gives exploration a small reward loop that fits the pace well. The rough edges are all inherited from the 2000 original, and Nightdive doesn't pretend otherwise. The story sets up a shadowy Council of Voices, a child that must be protected, and a mystery organization called the Keepers - then answers almost none of it. Enemy AI is aggressively accurate at ranges that should be comical. Some areas feature infinite enemy spawns that feel like a design relic from an era nobody should miss. The Cerebral Bore, one of the series' signature weapons, loses its punch here because the general combat is less gory and visceral than Turok 2's dismemberment sandbox. Fans of the second game who loved its sprawling, key-hunting structure will also notice that Turok 3 swapped all of that for a more linear, set-piece-focused flow. Whether that's a relief or a disappointment depends entirely on whether you found Turok 2's maze-like levels fun or maddening. One genuine omission that stings more than any design quirk: the original game's four-player multiplayer, including deathmatches and bot modes across 42 maps, did not make it into the remaster at all. For players who never touched a Turok game, this is a fine enough old-school FPS with modernized controls, a rock-solid framerate, and enough weapon variety - handguns, shotguns, rocket launchers, the vampire-like Inflator, and more - to stay interesting across its runtime. But context matters: this is the closing chapter of a trilogy, and it makes more emotional sense after the first two. Retro shooter fans chasing a tight, undemanding run-and-gun with some light character-choice replayability will get their money's worth. Everyone else should start with Turok: Dinosaur Hunter or Turok 2, where the series is operating at full power. Nightdive did the right thing completing the set, even if the set's weakest entry is still its weakest entry.

Catch-all
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 (64-bit required)
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 420 MB available space
- Graphics
- GPU with DirectX 11 or Vulkan 1.1 support
- Processor
- Intel or AMD Dual-Core at 2.0 GHz
- Sound Card
- 100% DirectX compatible sound card or onboard sound
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10 (64-bit required)
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 420 MB available space
- Graphics
- GPU with DirectX 11 or Vulkan 1.1 support
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-2300 2.8 GHz/AMD Phenom II X4 945 3.0 GHz or equivalent
- Sound Card
- 100% DirectX compatible sound card or onboard sound
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Game Info
- Developer
- Nightdive Studios
- Publisher
- Nightdive Studios
- Release Date
- Nov 30, 2023



