Cameroon do best when west Africa hosts Cup of Nations
They won the first of five titles in 1984 when Ivory Coast previously hosted the biennial African football showpiece.
Among the winning team was forward Roger Milla, who went on to achieve fame at the 1990 World Cup when the Indomitable Lions became the first quarter-finalists from Africa.
Further Cup of Nations triumphs for the central African country in the west of the continent came in Nigeria in 2000 and in Mali two years later.
No other country has won the tournament three times in west Africa - Egypt and Ghana succeeded twice each and Nigeria and Ivory Coast once each.
The other Cameroonian successes were in Morocco in 1988, and in the neighbouring central African nation of Gabon seven years ago.
With Manchester United goalkeeper Andre Onana, Napoli midfielder Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa and Besiktas forward Vincent Aboubakar in the squad, Cameroon are among the 2024 title favourites.
Aboubakar was the leading scorer at the 2022 finals in his homeland. He bagged eight goals, one less than record-holder Ndaye Mulamba netted for the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1974.
Staging a Cup of Nations is no guarantee that a country from the host region will emerge victorious.
North Africa has fared best with six victories from 11 tournaments followed by west Africa (4/9), central and east Africa (2/5 each) and southern Africa (1/3).
The 2024 edition kicks off on Saturday with a Group A clash between two-time champions Ivory Coast and Guinea-Bissau, whose three previous appearances failed to deliver a single victory.
On Sunday, Nigeria tackle Equatorial Guinea in the other Group A fixture, then record seven-time champions Egypt face Mozambique and Ghana meet Cape Verde in Group B.