Compara los precios de Europa Universalis V en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Paradox Tinto. Publicado por Paradox Interactive. Lanzado el 4/11/2025. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Strategy.

Five hundred years of history compressed into a simulation so dense it'll eat your weekends. EU5 is the grand strategy sequel nobody knew they needed until they played it.

I came into Europa Universalis V skeptical. Grand strategy isn't my usual lane, but twelve years is a long time to let a franchise sit, and Paradox Tinto had a lot to prove. After putting serious hours into it, my main complaint is that I started on a Thursday and lost the weekend. This thing has grip. The core loop is real-time-with-pause historical simulation running from 1337 to 1837, across hundreds of playable nations. You can be the King of England building a colonial empire, or a tiny Doge scrapping for relevance in northern Italy. The gap between those two starting positions is enormous and both are genuinely fun, though the game rewards you more for the harder climb. Currency runs everything: production, taxation, trade routes, and military logistics all feed into your treasury, and the economy here is layers-deep. Estates management, where you keep Nobles, Clergy, Burghers, and Peasantry either satisfied or suppressed, intersects constantly with your finances, your military readiness, and your political stability. Push the nobility too hard and loyalty evaporates fast. The mana points from EU4 are gone, replaced by organic population simulation and dynamic situations that feel considerably more grounded. It is a heavier cognitive load, but the payoff is proportionally bigger. The automation system is the smartest thing Paradox has done in years. You can hand off military control, trade decisions, or economic micromanagement to the AI and focus on the pillars you actually care about. Returning EU4 veterans have flagged that the game leans closer to Victoria's population depth than classic EU's clean nation-level abstraction, and that critique has some merit. Some long-time players find the complexity a step too far; newcomers following the improved tutorial ramp mostly report the opposite experience. Performance in the late game can drag, and balance tuning is ongoing, Paradox has been pushing patches steadily. The 1.1 update fixed over 300 bugs and added new unit types like Prussian Grenadiers and Border Hussars, while 1.3 is adding Great Power reworks and new financial mechanics including State Bonds and Central Banks. The game is clearly a long-term live project and the roadmap reflects that. Multiplayer works and has a dedicated forum subforum, though the session count is small relative to the overall playerbase. That makes sense: full campaigns run 50 to 100-plus hours, and coordinating that with other people is a real commitment. Workshop support and cloud saves are in. OpenCritic placed it in the 96th percentile of reviewed games with 100 percent of critics recommending it, which for a niche genre title is almost unheard of. Critics pointed to balance issues and occasional performance drops as the recurring negatives, but the depth of the population simulation and the sheer breadth of the map came up in virtually every positive review. Some parts of the world map are still thinner on content than Western Europe, which is a real gap if you want to run a campaign through Central Asia or sub-Saharan Africa. If you liked EU4, the upgrade is worth it. If you are new and have patience for a steep learning curve with a genuinely helpful tutorial and a generous automation layer beneath it, this is a solid entry point. If you need fast feedback loops and quick sessions, look elsewhere. This is a game you live in, not visit. Fred, Scout Team

Europa Universalis V

Europa Universalis V

4 nov 2025Paradox TintoParadox Interactive
GamerScout opina

Five hundred years of history compressed into a simulation so dense it'll eat your weekends. EU5 is the grand strategy sequel nobody knew they needed until they played it.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €44.83

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I came into Europa Universalis V skeptical. Grand strategy isn't my usual lane, but twelve years is a long time to let a franchise sit, and Paradox Tinto had a lot to prove. After putting serious hours into it, my main complaint is that I started on a Thursday and lost the weekend. This thing has grip. The core loop is real-time-with-pause historical simulation running from 1337 to 1837, across hundreds of playable nations. You can be the King of England building a colonial empire, or a tiny Doge scrapping for relevance in northern Italy. The gap between those two starting positions is enormous and both are genuinely fun, though the game rewards you more for the harder climb. Currency runs everything: production, taxation, trade routes, and military logistics all feed into your treasury, and the economy here is layers-deep. Estates management, where you keep Nobles, Clergy, Burghers, and Peasantry either satisfied or suppressed, intersects constantly with your finances, your military readiness, and your political stability. Push the nobility too hard and loyalty evaporates fast. The mana points from EU4 are gone, replaced by organic population simulation and dynamic situations that feel considerably more grounded. It is a heavier cognitive load, but the payoff is proportionally bigger. The automation system is the smartest thing Paradox has done in years. You can hand off military control, trade decisions, or economic micromanagement to the AI and focus on the pillars you actually care about. Returning EU4 veterans have flagged that the game leans closer to Victoria's population depth than classic EU's clean nation-level abstraction, and that critique has some merit. Some long-time players find the complexity a step too far; newcomers following the improved tutorial ramp mostly report the opposite experience. Performance in the late game can drag, and balance tuning is ongoing, Paradox has been pushing patches steadily. The 1.1 update fixed over 300 bugs and added new unit types like Prussian Grenadiers and Border Hussars, while 1.3 is adding Great Power reworks and new financial mechanics including State Bonds and Central Banks. The game is clearly a long-term live project and the roadmap reflects that. Multiplayer works and has a dedicated forum subforum, though the session count is small relative to the overall playerbase. That makes sense: full campaigns run 50 to 100-plus hours, and coordinating that with other people is a real commitment. Workshop support and cloud saves are in. OpenCritic placed it in the 96th percentile of reviewed games with 100 percent of critics recommending it, which for a niche genre title is almost unheard of. Critics pointed to balance issues and occasional performance drops as the recurring negatives, but the depth of the population simulation and the sheer breadth of the map came up in virtually every positive review. Some parts of the world map are still thinner on content than Western Europe, which is a real gap if you want to run a campaign through Central Asia or sub-Saharan Africa. If you liked EU4, the upgrade is worth it. If you are new and have patience for a steep learning curve with a genuinely helpful tutorial and a generous automation layer beneath it, this is a solid entry point. If you need fast feedback loops and quick sessions, look elsewhere. This is a game you live in, not visit.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcooponline-coopachievementstrading-cardsworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaReal-Time with PausePopulation SimulationEstate ManagementHistorical SandboxAutomation-FriendlyLong CampaignPost-Launch PatchingAlternate HistoryEconomic Simulation

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows® 10 Home 64 Bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia® GeForce™ GTX 1060 (6GB) | AMD® Radeon™ RX 580 (8GB) | Intel® Arc™ A380 (6GB) | Intel® Arc™ 140V
Processor
Intel® Core™ i7-8700K | AMD® Ryzen™ 5 3600

Recomendados

OS
Windows® 11
Memory
32 GB RAM
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia® GeForce™ RTX 3060 Ti (8GB) | AMD® Radeon™ RX 6700 XT (12 GB)
Processor
Intel® Core™ i7-14700K | AMD® Ryzen™ 7 7800X3D

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Paradox Tinto
Distribuidora
Paradox Interactive
Fecha de lanzamiento
4 nov 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Europa Universalis V?

Europa Universalis V está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Europa Universalis V?

Europa Universalis V se lanzó el 4 de noviembre de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Europa Universalis V?

Europa Universalis V fue desarrollado por Paradox Tinto y publicado por Paradox Interactive.