Compare Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Paradox Development Studio. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 9/1/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Multiplayer, Bird View, Simulation, Strategy, RPG.

Three expansions, two flavour packs, and an instant cosmetic unlock bundled into one pass for CK3's first content chapter. Buy in if you plan serious playtime across multiple dynasties.

Crusader Kings III is a grand-strategy RPG in which you pick a dynasty, choose a start date (867, 1066, or 1178), and then scheme, murder, seduce, and occasionally legitimately administrate your way through medieval history until 1453. You play the character, not the country. When your ruler dies, you inherit as the heir. Succession crises, trait stress, Dread management, cultural innovations, dynastic Renown, and the ever-present threat of your own vassal bloc are the actual gameplay. The base game is already one of the most feature-rich strategy releases in years. This Expansion Pass is the bundled content package that covers the first major chapter of post-launch DLC. The pass includes three content releases and two smaller flavour packs, plus the Fashion of the Abbasid Court cosmetic pack as an instant unlock on purchase. The confirmed contents cover Northern Lords, Royal Court, and Fate of Iberia. Northern Lords is the Norse flavour pack: it adds Shield Maidens, Berserkers, and Holy Warriors as unique men-at-arms unit types, Adventurer Realm events that let characters abandon holdings to carve out foreign kingdoms, new dynastic legacies, cultural innovations, and human sacrifice events for the 867 Viking sandbox. Fate of Iberia, the second flavour pack, introduced the Struggle system, a region-wide influence mechanic tracking Christian and Muslim competition across Iberia with branching resolution outcomes. It is mechanically the more interesting of the two, even if its effects are largely contained to the Iberian theatre. Royal Court is the major expansion: a 3D rendered throne room available to Kings and Emperors, the Hold Court decision that puts vassal grievances directly in front of you, the Grandeur metric that rewards visible wealth, Inspired People who generate artefacts over time, and a full hybrid-culture system that lets civilisations blend and diverge. Each of those systems layers onto the base game's trait, stress, and relationship graphs in ways that meaningfully change how you plan across generations. The honest caveat is that both flavour packs have a well-documented scope problem in the community. Northern Lords content is largely inert if you are not playing Norse or facing Norse raiders with any frequency. Fate of Iberia's Struggle mechanic is sharp but geographically gated. Royal Court is the substantive addition, and it arrived later in the chapter. If most of your planned playthroughs are outside Iberia and Scandinavia, you are buying a solid major expansion plus two region-specific garnishes. For newcomers worried about complexity: CK3 is the most accessible Paradox grand-strategy title released so far. The tutorial covers the basic loops, the in-game tooltips are readable, and the character-driven framing gives you a short-term narrative reason to keep going while the long-term systems click into place. The mod ecosystem, meanwhile, is enormous. Total conversions for Game of Thrones, Lord of the Rings, and the fall of Rome are all actively maintained, and the Paradox modding tools are well documented. Buying the expansion pass does not lock you into any particular playstyle; the systems it adds run in the background of any campaign regardless of your starting region, with Royal Court being the most universally felt of the three. If you are already in on CK3 and expect to accumulate significant hours across multiple dynasties, this first expansion pass is the efficient entry point to the content that defines the game's post-launch identity. Diego, Scout Team

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass
Single PlayerMultiplayerBird ViewSimulationStrategyRPG

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass

Sep 1, 2020Paradox Development StudioParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

Three expansions, two flavour packs, and an instant cosmetic unlock bundled into one pass for CK3's first content chapter. Buy in if you plan serious playtime across multiple dynasties.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €27.40

GamerScout Verdict

Worth it for committed CK3 players planning multi-region campaigns; Royal Court alone carries the pass, with the flavour packs as regional bonuses.

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About Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass

Crusader Kings III is a grand-strategy RPG in which you pick a dynasty, choose a start date (867, 1066, or 1178), and then scheme, murder, seduce, and occasionally legitimately administrate your way through medieval history until 1453. You play the character, not the country. When your ruler dies, you inherit as the heir. Succession crises, trait stress, Dread management, cultural innovations, dynastic Renown, and the ever-present threat of your own vassal bloc are the actual gameplay. The base game is already one of the most feature-rich strategy releases in years. This Expansion Pass is the bundled content package that covers the first major chapter of post-launch DLC. The pass includes three content releases and two smaller flavour packs, plus the Fashion of the Abbasid Court cosmetic pack as an instant unlock on purchase. The confirmed contents cover Northern Lords, Royal Court, and Fate of Iberia. Northern Lords is the Norse flavour pack: it adds Shield Maidens, Berserkers, and Holy Warriors as unique men-at-arms unit types, Adventurer Realm events that let characters abandon holdings to carve out foreign kingdoms, new dynastic legacies, cultural innovations, and human sacrifice events for the 867 Viking sandbox. Fate of Iberia, the second flavour pack, introduced the Struggle system, a region-wide influence mechanic tracking Christian and Muslim competition across Iberia with branching resolution outcomes. It is mechanically the more interesting of the two, even if its effects are largely contained to the Iberian theatre. Royal Court is the major expansion: a 3D rendered throne room available to Kings and Emperors, the Hold Court decision that puts vassal grievances directly in front of you, the Grandeur metric that rewards visible wealth, Inspired People who generate artefacts over time, and a full hybrid-culture system that lets civilisations blend and diverge. Each of those systems layers onto the base game's trait, stress, and relationship graphs in ways that meaningfully change how you plan across generations. The honest caveat is that both flavour packs have a well-documented scope problem in the community. Northern Lords content is largely inert if you are not playing Norse or facing Norse raiders with any frequency. Fate of Iberia's Struggle mechanic is sharp but geographically gated. Royal Court is the substantive addition, and it arrived later in the chapter. If most of your planned playthroughs are outside Iberia and Scandinavia, you are buying a solid major expansion plus two region-specific garnishes. For newcomers worried about complexity: CK3 is the most accessible Paradox grand-strategy title released so far. The tutorial covers the basic loops, the in-game tooltips are readable, and the character-driven framing gives you a short-term narrative reason to keep going while the long-term systems click into place. The mod ecosystem, meanwhile, is enormous. Total conversions for Game of Thrones, Lord of the Rings, and the fall of Rome are all actively maintained, and the Paradox modding tools are well documented. Buying the expansion pass does not lock you into any particular playstyle; the systems it adds run in the background of any campaign regardless of your starting region, with Royal Court being the most universally felt of the three. If you are already in on CK3 and expect to accumulate significant hours across multiple dynasties, this first expansion pass is the efficient entry point to the content that defines the game's post-launch identity.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamDynasty SimulatorFlavour PackRegion-Specific MechanicsThrone Room ManagementCultural HybridisationStruggle SystemGenerational StrategyMod-FriendlyMen-at-Arms Variety

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB
Graphics
Nvidia® GeForce™ GTX 460 (1 GB), or AMD® Radeon™ R7 260X (2 GB) or AMD® Radeon™ HD 6970 (2 GB), or Intel® Iris Pro™ 580
Processor
Intel® iCore™ i5-750 or Intel® iCore™ i3-2120, or AMD® Phenom™ II X6 1055T
System requirements
Windows® 8.1 64 bit or Windows® 10 Home 64 bit

Recommended

Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB
Graphics
Nvidia® GeForce™ GTX 1650 (4 GB)
Processor
Intel® iCore™ i5- 4670K or AMD® Ryzen™ 5 2400G
System requirements
Ubuntu 18.04

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Game Info

Developer
Paradox Development Studio
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
Sep 1, 2020

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Frequently asked questions about Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass

How much does Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass cost?

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass available on?

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass is available on PC.

When was Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass released?

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass was released on 1 September 2020.

Who developed Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass?

Crusader Kings III: Expansion Pass was developed by Paradox Development Studio and published by Paradox Interactive.