Compare Congo Merc prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Dreamwalker Games. Published by HexWar Games. Released on 12/12/2016. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Strategy.

A pocket-sized 1960s mercenary wargame that plays fast and asks little of your time, but gives equally little back once you've seen its four scenarios.

I kept my expectations deliberately low going into Congo Merc, and that turned out to be the right call. This is a light operational wargame ported from a physical mini-game in Decision Games' Commando series, and it carries every virtue and every flaw of its cardboard ancestor onto your screen. The core loop is compact by design: recruit a task force from a roster that includes jeep-mounted commandos, light armor, sappers, air support, and paratroopers, then push that force across a country-wide map where moving into key zones triggers event draws. Those events range from intelligence windfalls to UN interventions to rebel ambushes, and combat is resolved through a quasi-tactical system that weighs both firepower and tactical positioning. It is, structurally, a solitaire board game running inside a PC window, nothing more and nothing less. The scenario variety is the first number I want to put on the spreadsheet, and it is a small one. There are four preset missions total, including a race to recover intelligence from a downed aircraft before rebel forces do. Played through all four, you have essentially seen the game. The event deck does introduce some variance on repeat runs, but the decision space per session is shallow enough that experienced wargamers will feel the ceiling within a couple of hours. Armchair General's review described the gameplay as "rapidly becoming repetitive," and after sitting with it, that assessment holds. If you are the type of player who color-codes a Paradox campaign spreadsheet by province tax rate, this one will feel threadbare. What the game does offer is accessibility and historical flavor that most wargames fumble. The 1960s Congo conflict is an almost entirely ignored theater in PC strategy gaming, and the subject matter alone gives the title a certain value for history-minded players. The combat resolution is transparent enough that you can reason through outcomes rather than feel cheated by dice, and the task force assembly phase, while brief, does prompt you to think about force composition relative to the mission objective. Hostage rescue calls for different unit weighting than a pursuit of Cuban cadre, and that small layer of pre-mission planning is the game's most satisfying decision point. The tutorial situation is worth flagging directly because it matters for newcomers. What is labeled a tutorial is really a static briefing document, and it has internal continuity errors that can leave first-time players convinced they missed a prior screen. The good news is that the game's actual mechanical footprint is small enough that jumping into a mission and learning by doing works fine. The bad news is that HexWar has not patched this in years, and a reported input bug in the tutorial's early steps has lingered in community discussions since at least 2019. Steam reviews sit at a 50-50 split across only ten total votes, which tells you less about quality than it tells you about audience size. There is no modding support, no multiplayer, no post-launch content roadmap, and the graphics sit firmly in the utilitarian-bitmap tier that HexWar's mobile-first pipeline tends to produce. For the right buyer, none of that is a dealbreaker. If you want a 60-to-90-minute wargame session with genuine historical context, a force-composition puzzle, and no learning-curve commitment, Congo Merc delivers that specific thing at a low price point. Treat it as a digital board game night, not a strategy campaign. Strategy players with deeper appetites should look elsewhere, but the curious history buff who wants a self-contained operational puzzle in an underrepresented conflict will get their money's worth before the credits would roll, if this had credits. Diego, Scout Team

Congo Merc
Strategy

Congo Merc

Dec 12, 2016Dreamwalker GamesHexWar Games
GamerScout Says

A pocket-sized 1960s mercenary wargame that plays fast and asks little of your time, but gives equally little back once you've seen its four scenarios.

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About Congo Merc

I kept my expectations deliberately low going into Congo Merc, and that turned out to be the right call. This is a light operational wargame ported from a physical mini-game in Decision Games' Commando series, and it carries every virtue and every flaw of its cardboard ancestor onto your screen. The core loop is compact by design: recruit a task force from a roster that includes jeep-mounted commandos, light armor, sappers, air support, and paratroopers, then push that force across a country-wide map where moving into key zones triggers event draws. Those events range from intelligence windfalls to UN interventions to rebel ambushes, and combat is resolved through a quasi-tactical system that weighs both firepower and tactical positioning. It is, structurally, a solitaire board game running inside a PC window, nothing more and nothing less. The scenario variety is the first number I want to put on the spreadsheet, and it is a small one. There are four preset missions total, including a race to recover intelligence from a downed aircraft before rebel forces do. Played through all four, you have essentially seen the game. The event deck does introduce some variance on repeat runs, but the decision space per session is shallow enough that experienced wargamers will feel the ceiling within a couple of hours. Armchair General's review described the gameplay as "rapidly becoming repetitive," and after sitting with it, that assessment holds. If you are the type of player who color-codes a Paradox campaign spreadsheet by province tax rate, this one will feel threadbare. What the game does offer is accessibility and historical flavor that most wargames fumble. The 1960s Congo conflict is an almost entirely ignored theater in PC strategy gaming, and the subject matter alone gives the title a certain value for history-minded players. The combat resolution is transparent enough that you can reason through outcomes rather than feel cheated by dice, and the task force assembly phase, while brief, does prompt you to think about force composition relative to the mission objective. Hostage rescue calls for different unit weighting than a pursuit of Cuban cadre, and that small layer of pre-mission planning is the game's most satisfying decision point. The tutorial situation is worth flagging directly because it matters for newcomers. What is labeled a tutorial is really a static briefing document, and it has internal continuity errors that can leave first-time players convinced they missed a prior screen. The good news is that the game's actual mechanical footprint is small enough that jumping into a mission and learning by doing works fine. The bad news is that HexWar has not patched this in years, and a reported input bug in the tutorial's early steps has lingered in community discussions since at least 2019. Steam reviews sit at a 50-50 split across only ten total votes, which tells you less about quality than it tells you about audience size. There is no modding support, no multiplayer, no post-launch content roadmap, and the graphics sit firmly in the utilitarian-bitmap tier that HexWar's mobile-first pipeline tends to produce. For the right buyer, none of that is a dealbreaker. If you want a 60-to-90-minute wargame session with genuine historical context, a force-composition puzzle, and no learning-curve commitment, Congo Merc delivers that specific thing at a low price point. Treat it as a digital board game night, not a strategy campaign. Strategy players with deeper appetites should look elsewhere, but the curious history buff who wants a self-contained operational puzzle in an underrepresented conflict will get their money's worth before the credits would roll, if this had credits. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Board Game AdaptationHistorical WargameSolitaire DesignEvent-DrivenOperational-LevelShort SessionsCold War EraForce Composition

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP3/Vista/7/8/8.1/10
Memory
3 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
600 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX compatible graphics card
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD equivalent
Sound Card
DirectX compatible sound card

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Game Info

Developer
Dreamwalker Games
Publisher
HexWar Games
Release Date
Dec 12, 2016

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Price History

2026-06-100.73(lowest)

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Congo Merc is available on PC, Mac.

When was Congo Merc released?

Congo Merc was released on 12 December 2016.

Who developed Congo Merc?

Congo Merc was developed by Dreamwalker Games and published by HexWar Games.