For a little historical perspective, read Stroustrup's Design and Evolution of C++.
Stroustrup was working on a simulation back in his grad school days, and found Simula 67 to be an excellent language for the purpose, easy to write in.
However, Simula was completely inadequate for actual use, since it was so inefficient. Stroustrup was forced to rewrite the stuff in BCPL, which was a very primitive predecessor of C, and found it extremely painful.
After that, he was determined to come up with a language that was as effective as C, but which would support Simula-style programming. The result was at first called C with Classes, then C++.
However, C++ didn't stop there. It gained other features, like templates. This allowed the Standard Template Library. Its creator, Stepanov, claimed that he'd found no other language in which he could implement it to his satisfaction. (He seemed a bit grumpy about answering the question yet again in a Lisp forum.)
C++ shines at applying advanced and potentially weird programming techniques efficiently.