The game received mixed but mostly negative reviews. Critics noted that the game had been marketed as being similar to
Tomb Raider,
IGN also razed the voice acting, while
GameSpot and
GameRevolution attributed the poorness of the voice tracks to low quality production. By contrast, Crispin Boyer of
Electronic Gaming Monthly judged that "The graphics are pretty sharp - if not overly colorful - and the voice acting ain't bad either. Its 13 maze-like levels will hold your interest." Boyer's co-reviewer, Ken "Sushi-X" Williams, also had a relatively positive response to the game, but remarked, "Despite the huge exploration, I wonder why I can't jump, climb or look around. These simple functions, when missing, make an extremely flat game, something a 3-D title should never be."
GameSpot noted that the Windows version is a port of the PlayStation version, and criticized its lack of mid-level saving.
GameRevolution found the graphical effects and level of detail when using 3D acceleration cards to be impressive, but said it did not make up for the massive plot holes and poor gameplay.
Next Generation instead argued that the 3D card compatibility only serves to highlight how limited
Excalibur 2555 AD is compared to leading PC games. == References ==