Salammbo: Battle for Carthage box art

See more on IGDB

Salammbo: Battle for Carthage

Remove Ads with Grouvee Gold

Salammbo: Battle for Carthage

May 8, 2003

Main game

2.89 average rating based on 9 ratings

5
0
4
2
3
5
2
1
1
1
Inspired by the novel of Gustave Flaubert and the works of Phillippe Druillet, Salammbo: Battle for Carthage puts you in the middle of two of antiquities greatest powers. Can you deliver Salammbo's message before it's too late?
Release Dates
May 08, 2003 (Worldwide)
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Remove Ads with Grouvee Gold
User Stats
203
In Collection
4
Wish Listed
0
Playing
171
Backlogged
How Long Is Salammbo: Battle for Carthage?
No playthrough data yet
shoma
shoma gave Jan 21, 2024
shoma gave Jan 21, 2024
shoma's review of Salammbo: Battle for Carthage

Unique-looking point-and-click game. It's based on a comic book Salammbo that retells the events of the Mercenary Revolt (241–237 BC) but in a space fantasy setting.

The game, however is further stylized as to appear as if it takes place not just on a different planet, but in a dark, desolate world where the sun barely shines and the inhabitants don't always resemble humans.

enter image description here

In the center is Salammbo, daughter of the carthaginian officer who falls in love with the leader of the mercenaries. You play as Spendius, an escaped slave that finds himself in the mercenary camp. You have nowhere to go, and so with the help of your gift of gab you start a chain of events that changes the fate of the city and the mercenaries.

enter image description here

The artstyle is absolutely stunning and every location drips with atmosphere. I found the general gameplay enjoyable. You search for items, apply them in the right place or wear them as clothes to progress. However, there were a few puzzles that made no sense to me so I had to use a walkthrough. Sometimes orienting yourself in the environment can prove difficult, since there's no proper 3D camera here, it's you …

Read More

Unique-looking point-and-click game. It's based on a comic book Salammbo that retells the events of the Mercenary Revolt (241–237 BC) but in a space fantasy setting.

The game, however is further stylized as to appear as if it takes place not just on a different planet, but in a dark, desolate world where the sun barely shines and the inhabitants don't always resemble humans.

enter image description here

In the center is Salammbo, daughter of the carthaginian officer who falls in love with the leader of the mercenaries. You play as Spendius, an escaped slave that finds himself in the mercenary camp. You have nowhere to go, and so with the help of your gift of gab you start a chain of events that changes the fate of the city and the mercenaries.

enter image description here

The artstyle is absolutely stunning and every location drips with atmosphere. I found the general gameplay enjoyable. You search for items, apply them in the right place or wear them as clothes to progress. However, there were a few puzzles that made no sense to me so I had to use a walkthrough. Sometimes orienting yourself in the environment can prove difficult, since there's no proper 3D camera here, it's you classic point-and-click technology, like Myst 10 years before it, but somewhat upgraded.

I really liked the story and the world. Despite the source material being a love story, you play as an outsider that fights for survival with his wits and courage.

enter image description here

It is definitely a high-budget production, but perhaps due to most of the resources going into the art, the interactive elements of the gameplay (shooting, etc.) are somewhat underwhelming, but the general exploration is handled very well. The company making the game did go bankrpupt and a different studio had to finish, so it's sort of understandable.

It's on Steam, but it requires some tinkering on modern PCs, of course. Drop the contents of the Zip-file in the directory and you should be good:

https://github.com/narzoul/DDrawCompat/releases (the Zip without the "debug")

enter image description here

It's a must-play for fans of the genre, and despite not really knowing much about point-and-click quests, I would dare to say that it's one of the best, and also one of the last of its kind before this type of games died.

Read Less