If you’ve played Tomb Raider: Anniversary more than once, you know how gorgeous the environments are—and how frustrating it is that the camera is glued to Lara’s shoulders. Wouldn't it be cool to fly around St. Francis Folly like a ghost or get a cinematic shot of the T-Rex from above?

| Action | Keyboard Key | | :--- | :--- | | | F12 or NumPad 0 | | Move Forward/Backward | W / S | | Strafe Left/Right | A / D | | Ascend (Fly Up) | Spacebar or Q | | Descend (Fly Down) | C or E | | Increase Flight Speed | NumPad + | | Decrease Flight Speed | NumPad - |

If you want a into how fly/noclip modes are implemented in third-party tools (without naming or linking to specific trainers), I can write that as an educational overview for game modding researchers. Just let me know.

The fly trainer is primarily a community-made tool created by developers like It is exclusive to the Windows PC version of the game. Version Specificity:

"Fly Trainer" typically refers to a cheat tool or mod that allows players to enable "noclip" or flight mode in Tomb Raider: Anniversary (2007), bypassing normal movement constraints. While this is a specific and niche topic, a truly deep academic or technical paper would require access to game code, reverse-engineering data, or official documentation—none of which I can generate or retrieve in real time.

So, why should you consider using a Tomb Raider Anniversary fly trainer? Here are a few benefits:

: The trainer often requires a specific trae.exe file size (commonly 8.93MB or 19MB ) to work. If your game version differs, the tool may fail to activate.