Country Pack - Hearts of Iron IV: Graveyard of Empires
A Hearts of Iron IV country pack covering Iran, India, Iraq, and Afghanistan - new focus trees sound good on paper, but 16% positive reviews tell a different story.
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About Country Pack - Hearts of Iron IV: Graveyard of Empires
Graveyard of Empires is a paid country pack for Hearts of Iron IV that adds national focus trees and events for four Central and South Asian nations: Iran, India, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The pitch is straightforward - Paradox gives these historically rich, often-overlooked regions the same kind of branching focus-tree treatment that larger DLCs have given to Germany, the Soviet Union, or the United States. In theory, playing a newly industrializing Iran or a fractured Afghanistan navigating great-power pressure should be compelling. In practice, the community has responded with one of the most lopsided negative review scores in recent HOI4 DLC history. The numbers here are hard to ignore. At the time of writing, 16% positive out of more than 3,200 reviews puts Graveyard of Empires in rare company - the kind of score that suggests something went structurally wrong, not just a vocal minority griping about balance patches. Community feedback points to focus trees that feel shallow compared to what Paradox has shipped in premium DLCs, events that lack the historical texture players expect from this studio, and a general sense that the content volume does not justify the pack's price. India in particular draws criticism given its scope: a subcontinent with enormous decision-making potential reportedly receives treatment that feels underdeveloped relative to the complexity HOI4 veterans expect. For strategy players who care about AI quality and decision depth, the concerns are real. A good focus tree is not just a list of bonuses - it creates branching historical or ahistorical paths that change how the AI behaves, how wars escalate, and what late-game boards look like across multiple playthroughs. When a focus tree feels thin, every run through it starts to look the same after hour three. Afghanistan and Iraq have smaller footprints on the 1936-1945 map, so their trees are always going to be shorter, but Iran and especially India should have had the room to be genuinely complex. Whether that complexity is here is, based on review sentiment, a firm no from the playerbase. There is a version of this pack that appeals to completionists or to players who specifically want to run South Asian campaigns and currently have nothing at all for those nations. If you have never played a focus-tree-enabled Iran before, any tree is better than the generic fallback. The mod ecosystem around HOI4 is also worth watching - community modders have historically patched up underwhelming official content, and a rework mod for this pack may appear over time. But buying a product hoping the community fixes it is a gamble, and right now there is no rework to point to. If you are newer to HOI4 and wondering whether this is a good entry-point DLC, it is not - La Resistance, Man the Guns, or Waking the Tiger offer far more mechanical depth per dollar and are better introductions to how focus trees shape a campaign. Veterans who have exhausted every other regional focus tree and specifically want to play these four nations might find marginal value here, but should go in with calibrated expectations. The overwhelmingly negative score reflects genuine disappointment from a community that holds Paradox to a high standard because the studio has, at its best, cleared that bar. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Paradox Development Studio
- Publisher
- Paradox Interactive
- Release Date
- Mar 4, 2025