![]() We don’t actually know if this works - we really didn’t find it necessary to try it out for ourselves - but there are a few forum posts that claim to have found nude codes for Tomb Raider 3 using the Xploder. ![]() Of course, there’s one possible option for those who care deeply enough to look for it, and are willing to pick up the Xploder Cheat Cartridge for PlayStation (a device that plugs into the memory card slot of your PSOne and lets you hack your games). The thing is, as this Game Informer staffer points out, the nude code never existed. This anonymous letter-writer claims that “millions of people are just sitting in their homes dreaming about the nude code night and day,” and they believe that printing the nude code would be a way for Game Informer to sell millions of copies of their magazine (or millions of copies of Tomb Raider 3, maybe - it’s actually not completely clear from the context here). ![]() In fact, one gamer (who unsurprisingly chose to remain anonymous) became frustrated enough to pen this later to Game Informer (which was published in the February, 1999 issue of the magazine): Who knows how many hours were lost mashing away at button sequences in order to get just a tiny little peek at Lara Croft’s pixelated posterior without those shorts? Yes, we’re referring to the Tomb Raider nude code. But there’s one myth from the 1990s that was particularly, um, spicy? From tales of reviving Aeris in Final Fantasy VII to secret methods of accessing the Sky Temple in Ocarina of time, it seemed like everyone with a controller was willing to spread wild rumors about their favorite games. In the late 1990s, rumors about video games were all the rage.
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