![]() I know there is a taboo about 'save-scumming' and that the common opinion is that you need to learn from your mistakes. Not only does it give you sweet bonuses that are especially useful in the early game, but if also gives you easy early game objectives that help you learn the game, like how to build an army to max capacity, or conquer a small one province country to work through the basics of warfare, coring, and dealing with the inevitable rebels that will arise.ģ) Don't be ashamed to use save-states. If you are looking for a rough direction to go, use your missions tab. The game is at its best when you are able to take whatever damn path you please and understand how to use the options the game gives you to achieve that. If you are a beginner and are using country guides to play your campaign, you may learn one specific way to min-max a country in a specific game state, but you will not gain organic knowledge. ![]() In my opinion, they are more meant to be exercises for experienced players who have seen literal thousands of hours of gameplay and make them to share the smallest of optimum plays and min-maxing. You'll thank yourself.Ģ) Do not use country guides. Focus on learning what the buttons and numbers mean and do on your screen is most of the battle, so push through it. ![]() How to efficiently conduct warfare and build economies will come with time. The best way to learn the game is through organic gameplay. Resist the urge to watch gameplay tutorials. This is much more useful than blindly pushing buttons and see what sticks. My first 10 hours in game were spent on 10 years of In-Game time, two of which were spent before I even un-paused the game for the first time Your first goal is to read each stat in the top toolbar, each button in your country dashboard, mouse over each number to see its modifiers, click on other countries and see their relationships. Spain with decent conquest and colonization in Africa and the conquering of the Iberian Peninsula and Muscovy with a nice chunk of land and economy for 100 years in.ġ) BE PATIENT! You will learn the game if you are willing to sink the time necessary to learn how the fundamental pieces work. If you are new or someone who is willing to try to learn EU4 again, then read on. Not expert masterclasses of min-maxing prowess or dazzling displays of military genius, but decent games for someone who only has 60 hours under his belt so far. I thought that the Learning Curve was too much.īut after coming back to the game and taking the right approach, I was building respectable campaigns in no time. ![]() You then decide that this game is too much for you and let it rot in your Library. You panic and just do random things, then the next thing you know you are in crippling debt and get conquered. So many buttons, numbers, countries, options. You are excited to get into Grand Strategy games, you relish the idea of World Conquest, creating the most enviable economy history has ever known, the very utterance of your empire's glorious name sending shivers down you rivals' spines! You open your first campaign, eager to dive in and then.
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