| CIB |
| Includes box & manual |
Celtic Kings: The Punic Wars appeals to both RTS and RPG players searching for a new experience in already known genres. The multiplayer provides new strategic gameplay tuned towards the traditional RTS players. It is easy to start playing the game but there are a lot of new options to explore. Celtic Kings: The Punic Wars continues the traditions of the award winning Celtic Kings: Rage of War and will be exploring the three Punic wars between Rome and Carthage in the period 264BC ... 146BC which includes the famous campaigns of Hannibal and Scipio Africanus.
There are two modes of playing the game that complement each other ... adventure mode and strategic mode. In strategic mode the player fights computer opponents and human players exercising his strategic and tactical skills to achieve objective victory. He trains and commands units, hires and develops heroes, acquires powerful artifacts and conquers strongholds and villages. The gameplay in this mode adds new dimensions to the RTS genre.
There are two separate adventures in CK: The Punic Wars. The first follows the Carthaginian general Hannibal during his famous crossing of the Alps, which posed the greatest threat to Rome ever. The second campaign follows the expansion of the Roman republic into a dominating power in the ancient world culminating with the total destruction of the city of Carthage.
The people of Carthage belong to an ancient civilization of merchants. The wealth and safety of their homeland had convinced them that their civilization would last for eternity. Although skilled in the art of war, they emerge victorious because of the overwhelming power of their armies and not because of the bravery of their men. In fact, their warriors were mercenaries from nearby tribes in North Africa, Spain and even Macedonia. The Carthaginian customs were barbarous to the extreme. When a battle was won they would sacrifice their most handsome prisoners to the gods; when a battle had been lost the children of their most noble families were cast into the furnace.
Iberians were brave and independent people. The Roman historian Estrabon told that Iberian warriors used to carry a poison and they did not hesitate to take it rather than being captured. A sentence ascribed to Emperor Augustus best describes them: "First to be invaded last to be dominated". Yet Iberians were peaceful people dedicated to farming and rarely inclined to wage war. Women played an important role in Iberian society. The Roman historian Estrabon says "Daughters are the ones who inherit and choose wives for their brothers".