Compare Europa Universalis IV - Dharma (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Paradox Development Studio. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 8/13/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 87/100.

Dharma reshapes EU4's India with new mission trees and a government design system that finally lets you build the exact administrative machine you want.

Dharma is a content expansion for Europa Universalis IV that focuses heavily on the Indian subcontinent while also introducing a government reform system that ripples across every single nation in the game. If you have never played EU4 before, that second part matters more than it sounds: the Design Your Government feature replaces the old, fairly rigid government type structure with a tiered reform ladder. You pick reforms as your country accumulates legitimacy and administrative power over the centuries, shaping whether your state leans absolutist, republican, or somewhere in between. The decision space is real. A run as Vijayanagar feels mechanically different from a run as the Ottomans even before you factor in mission trees, because the reform choices you prioritize diverge from the first decade onward. For India specifically, Dharma is the expansion that finally treated the subcontinent as more than a trade-income piñata waiting to be absorbed by a European blob. The new Indian mission trees give major regional powers like the Mughals, the Rajput states, and the Deccan sultanates concrete strategic goals: expand along historically plausible corridors, unlock unique rewards, and interact with the reworked Indian estate system. Estates in this expansion receive additional privileges and interactions, which means managing your Brahmins, the Nobles, and the Vaisyas becomes a genuine balancing act rather than a checkbox. Overextend your noble privileges to rush a conquest and you may find your tax income quietly leaking away by 1600. Trade Company investments are the other headline feature, and they age well. You can now pour ducats into your trade company regions to build up infrastructure, administrative capacity, and trade power bonuses in a way that actually rewards long-term planning over pure conquest. Late-game trade runs through Hindustan feel significantly more engaging after Dharma because the nodes have more texture. If you are the kind of player who opens a game planning your 1650 trade configuration from turn one, this DLC has content for you. Where Dharma is weaker is in scope. The Indian mission trees are good but not exhaustive. Smaller regional powers still feel underserved compared to the attention lavished on European nations in other expansions. The government reform system, while genuinely deep, also contributed to a longer onboarding curve that newer players sometimes find overwhelming when stacked with everything else EU4 throws at them. That said, the reform tooltips are clear, and the system introduces complexity gradually enough that it does not feel hostile if you are willing to pause and read. Any newcomer who commits to a slow-paced first campaign as a medium-tier Indian regional power will find Dharma's mechanics click into place well before the midgame. On the mod ecosystem front, the government reform framework Dharma introduced has become foundational. Major overhaul mods have built entire alternate-history government paths on top of it. That downstream influence is worth factoring in if you are the type who eventually graduates from vanilla into the modding rabbit hole. Dharma is not a standalone experience - it requires the base game and slots best alongside Emperor or Leviathan for a fuller India experience - but within the EU4 DLC stack it holds up as one of the expansions that added systemic depth rather than just surface content. Diego, Scout Team

Europa Universalis IV - Dharma (DLC)
SimulationStrategy

Europa Universalis IV - Dharma (DLC)

Aug 13, 2013Paradox Development StudioParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

Dharma reshapes EU4's India with new mission trees and a government design system that finally lets you build the exact administrative machine you want.

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About Europa Universalis IV - Dharma (DLC)

Dharma is a content expansion for Europa Universalis IV that focuses heavily on the Indian subcontinent while also introducing a government reform system that ripples across every single nation in the game. If you have never played EU4 before, that second part matters more than it sounds: the Design Your Government feature replaces the old, fairly rigid government type structure with a tiered reform ladder. You pick reforms as your country accumulates legitimacy and administrative power over the centuries, shaping whether your state leans absolutist, republican, or somewhere in between. The decision space is real. A run as Vijayanagar feels mechanically different from a run as the Ottomans even before you factor in mission trees, because the reform choices you prioritize diverge from the first decade onward. For India specifically, Dharma is the expansion that finally treated the subcontinent as more than a trade-income piñata waiting to be absorbed by a European blob. The new Indian mission trees give major regional powers like the Mughals, the Rajput states, and the Deccan sultanates concrete strategic goals: expand along historically plausible corridors, unlock unique rewards, and interact with the reworked Indian estate system. Estates in this expansion receive additional privileges and interactions, which means managing your Brahmins, the Nobles, and the Vaisyas becomes a genuine balancing act rather than a checkbox. Overextend your noble privileges to rush a conquest and you may find your tax income quietly leaking away by 1600. Trade Company investments are the other headline feature, and they age well. You can now pour ducats into your trade company regions to build up infrastructure, administrative capacity, and trade power bonuses in a way that actually rewards long-term planning over pure conquest. Late-game trade runs through Hindustan feel significantly more engaging after Dharma because the nodes have more texture. If you are the kind of player who opens a game planning your 1650 trade configuration from turn one, this DLC has content for you. Where Dharma is weaker is in scope. The Indian mission trees are good but not exhaustive. Smaller regional powers still feel underserved compared to the attention lavished on European nations in other expansions. The government reform system, while genuinely deep, also contributed to a longer onboarding curve that newer players sometimes find overwhelming when stacked with everything else EU4 throws at them. That said, the reform tooltips are clear, and the system introduces complexity gradually enough that it does not feel hostile if you are willing to pause and read. Any newcomer who commits to a slow-paced first campaign as a medium-tier Indian regional power will find Dharma's mechanics click into place well before the midgame. On the mod ecosystem front, the government reform framework Dharma introduced has become foundational. Major overhaul mods have built entire alternate-history government paths on top of it. That downstream influence is worth factoring in if you are the type who eventually graduates from vanilla into the modding rabbit hole. Dharma is not a standalone experience - it requires the base game and slots best alongside Emperor or Leviathan for a fuller India experience - but within the EU4 DLC stack it holds up as one of the expansions that added systemic depth rather than just surface content. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamGovernment ReformsIndia FocusTrade MechanicsEstate ManagementMission TreesLate-Game DepthMod-FriendlyDLC ExpansionGrand StrategyGovernment CustomizationIndian SubcontinentNation Building

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
87
Steam
88%(136,394)

Game Info

Developer
Paradox Development Studio
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
Aug 13, 2013

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