Compare Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Pendulo Studios. Published by Microids. Released on 11/7/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure.

If your fondest childhood memories involve Hergé's boy reporter, there's just enough here to scratch that nostalgia itch - but anyone expecting a polished adventure will run out of patience fast.

My first impression of Cigars of the Pharaoh was shaped almost entirely by expectation: Pendulo Studios, the team behind the Runaway point-and-click series, adapting one of the most beloved comic properties in European history. The result lands somewhere genuinely uncomfortable - not a disaster, not a success, but a game that occasionally shows you exactly what it could have been and then fumbles it. The structure tries to cover a lot of ground. You play as Tintin in third-person across locations that follow the original 1932 comic arc - a Mediterranean cruise, Egyptian tombs, desert stretches, and a lush jungle. A detective vision mechanic lets you scan environments for clues, and there are light collectible photo opportunities tucked into the levels. The standout section is unquestionably the Egyptian tomb sequence: sliding block puzzles, mirror-alignment challenges, musical memory tests, and observation puzzles that actually require you to stop and think. For a stretch, the game feels like what it was supposed to be. Then it hands control back to stealth segments and quick-time event chase sequences, and the illusion collapses. The stealth AI is erratic - guards detect you through geometry one moment and ignore obvious sightlines the next. The QTE chases are repetitive and padded, replacing actual play with a rhythm of button prompts that goes on far too long. The second playable character, Snowy, switches perspective to first-person and uses a "Snowy vision" mode that highlights scents and trails. On paper, a clever idea. In practice, his stealth sections drew some of the harshest community criticism at launch. The game was released in a genuinely broken state - Pendulo Studios publicly acknowledged this on launch day and committed to patches, which did eventually stabilise things. Playing it now is a markedly different experience than at launch, but even in its patched form, none of the action mechanics feel smooth. Running, driving, flying, sneaking - each one has a roughness that never quite irons out. Where the game earns its keep is in presentation fidelity. The environments recreate Hergé's settings with real care: detailed geometry, familiar silhouettes, and a soundtrack that pulls from the 1990s animated series in ways that will disarm anyone who grew up with it. Captain Haddock, Thomson and Thompson, and Professor Sarcophagus all show up and behave recognisably. The dialogue has a light, appropriate tone. Tintin's character model is a divisive design choice, leaning toward the 2011 Spielberg film aesthetic rather than the flat-line comic art style, and not everyone accepts the trade-off. The runtime sits around 9 to 12 hours depending on how much you explore - short enough that a weekend is all it asks. The honest read on this one: if you read the albums, the game is a bumpy but occasionally charming tour of a story you already love. If you have no attachment to the IP, there is nothing here that adventure or action games elsewhere do not do better. The puzzle segments are the only moments where Pendulo's actual strengths surface, and they are outnumbered by the weaker action and stealth beats surrounding them. Alex, Scout Team

Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh

Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh

Nov 7, 2023Pendulo StudiosMicroids
GamerScout Says

If your fondest childhood memories involve Hergé's boy reporter, there's just enough here to scratch that nostalgia itch - but anyone expecting a polished adventure will run out of patience fast.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €10.64

GamerScout Verdict

Worth a look for devoted Tintin fans at a discount; newcomers will find slicker adventure games with less friction elsewhere.

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Price History

Historical low
€10.649 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€9.86€10.43€11.00€11.575 Jun15 Jun25 Jun5 Jul15 Jul
5 Jun — 15 Jul
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About Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh

My first impression of Cigars of the Pharaoh was shaped almost entirely by expectation: Pendulo Studios, the team behind the Runaway point-and-click series, adapting one of the most beloved comic properties in European history. The result lands somewhere genuinely uncomfortable - not a disaster, not a success, but a game that occasionally shows you exactly what it could have been and then fumbles it. The structure tries to cover a lot of ground. You play as Tintin in third-person across locations that follow the original 1932 comic arc - a Mediterranean cruise, Egyptian tombs, desert stretches, and a lush jungle. A detective vision mechanic lets you scan environments for clues, and there are light collectible photo opportunities tucked into the levels. The standout section is unquestionably the Egyptian tomb sequence: sliding block puzzles, mirror-alignment challenges, musical memory tests, and observation puzzles that actually require you to stop and think. For a stretch, the game feels like what it was supposed to be. Then it hands control back to stealth segments and quick-time event chase sequences, and the illusion collapses. The stealth AI is erratic - guards detect you through geometry one moment and ignore obvious sightlines the next. The QTE chases are repetitive and padded, replacing actual play with a rhythm of button prompts that goes on far too long. The second playable character, Snowy, switches perspective to first-person and uses a "Snowy vision" mode that highlights scents and trails. On paper, a clever idea. In practice, his stealth sections drew some of the harshest community criticism at launch. The game was released in a genuinely broken state - Pendulo Studios publicly acknowledged this on launch day and committed to patches, which did eventually stabilise things. Playing it now is a markedly different experience than at launch, but even in its patched form, none of the action mechanics feel smooth. Running, driving, flying, sneaking - each one has a roughness that never quite irons out. Where the game earns its keep is in presentation fidelity. The environments recreate Hergé's settings with real care: detailed geometry, familiar silhouettes, and a soundtrack that pulls from the 1990s animated series in ways that will disarm anyone who grew up with it. Captain Haddock, Thomson and Thompson, and Professor Sarcophagus all show up and behave recognisably. The dialogue has a light, appropriate tone. Tintin's character model is a divisive design choice, leaning toward the 2011 Spielberg film aesthetic rather than the flat-line comic art style, and not everyone accepts the trade-off. The runtime sits around 9 to 12 hours depending on how much you explore - short enough that a weekend is all it asks. The honest read on this one: if you read the albums, the game is a bumpy but occasionally charming tour of a story you already love. If you have no attachment to the IP, there is nothing here that adventure or action games elsewhere do not do better. The puzzle segments are the only moments where Pendulo's actual strengths surface, and they are outnumbered by the weaker action and stealth beats surrounding them.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamLicensed IPPoint-and-Click ElementsQuick-Time EventsStealth SegmentsDetective VisionDual Playable CharactersComic Book AdaptationCollectible PhotosPuzzle-Focused Sections

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 x64
Processor
CPU Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-10600K CPU @ 4.10GHz / AMD Ryzen 5 4600H
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 / AMD Radeon RX 5600
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
34 G…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 x64
Processor
CPU Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-10600K CPU @ 4.10GHz / AMD Ryzen 5 4600H
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 / AMD Radeon RX 5700
DirectX
Version 12 Storage…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
58%(337)

Game Info

Developer
Pendulo Studios
Publisher
Microids
Release Date
Nov 7, 2023

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Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh released?

Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh was released on 7 November 2023.

Who developed Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh?

Tintin Reporter - Cigars of the Pharaoh was developed by Pendulo Studios and published by Microids.