As expected, straight to Zama. Not surprising at all but still, too bad though that the author couldn't fit in the original peace and betrayal. I always thought it was interesting/important that Scipio and Carthage originally agreed on a treaty with very generous terms, regardless of the total war damage Scipio talked about in this chapter. It was Carthage that then regained confidence and breached, after which only total surrender was acceptable. The author glosses over the omission as well as could be expected, but still a shame, the dynamic there would have made for an even better final face-to-face.
And yeah the plan to cause chaos to make use of numbers was interesting, but this also highlights how critical intelligence is and scouting vs deception, which in turn was another issue with elephants: they're big, and hard to hide.