Compare Europa Universalis IV: Lions of the North (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Paradox Development Studio, Paradox Tinto. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 9/13/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

Focused Baltic Sea content drop for EU4 that rewires mission trees for several underplayed northern nations. Niche but meaty if those regions are your thing.

Lions of the North is a content expansion for Europa Universalis IV, not a systems overhaul. If you came here hoping for new mechanics, a reworked economy, or AI improvements, this is not that pack. What it delivers instead is a targeted set of new mission trees and historical decision chains for a cluster of Baltic Sea nations that previously made do with generic mission structures. We are talking about countries like the Teutonic Order, Denmark, Sweden, Livonian Order, Lithuania, Kurland, and several smaller northern tags that rarely got the bespoke treatment that bigger-ticket nations like France or Castile enjoyed. The headline feature is the expanded use of branching missions. Rather than a single linear reward path, several of the new trees ask you to make meaningful choices mid-campaign that push your nation toward historically distinct identities. Sweden can chase a Scandinavian empire or pivot toward Baltic dominance. The Teutonic Order has options reflecting its slow secular transformation. These branches do not just swap flavor text; they gate different power rewards, casus belli access, and province-specific modifiers, which means your build order in the first few decades actually matters differently depending on which branch you are targeting. That is the kind of decision-making depth EU4 players want from paid content. For players who already have 500 hours logged and have exhausted the interesting starts in Western Europe and the Ottomans, the Baltic region is genuinely underexplored. Kurland runs in particular have a cult following in the community because the tag starts tiny and landlocked-adjacent, and Lions of the North gives that run more scaffolding. The mission trees here provide clearer progression goals and more reasons to engage with the specific regional HRE politics and the Northern Crusades context. If you have never played a Baltic campaign, this DLC lowers the barrier because you now have guided objectives rather than staring at a blank map wondering what to do with Riga. The weaknesses are real, though. Lions of the North does not touch AI behavior for these nations, so you will still watch the Teutonic Order collapse into irrelevance in most observer games without human intervention. The content is also narrow by design. If your regular EU4 sessions center on Iberia, Ming, or anything south of Hamburg, you will get essentially zero value from this purchase. The branching mission gimmick, while well-executed here, is something Paradox introduced in earlier DLC, so veteran players will not find it novel. And at launch there were documented interactions where certain mission rewards conflicted with existing DLC events, though patches have addressed most of those. From a mod ecosystem standpoint, the new mission trees slot cleanly into major overhaul mods like MEIOU and Taxes and Anbennar, which is a practical consideration if you play modded. The Steam Workshop integration means community patches for edge-case bugs arrive fast. That is one place EU4's age works in its favor: a well-maintained mod pipeline that fixes what Paradox misses. Bottom line for the spreadsheet-minded: Lions of the North is a regional specialist purchase. Run the numbers on your own playtime. If Baltic or Scandinavian campaigns represent a meaningful chunk of what you want to do next in EU4, the branching missions alone justify the add-on. If you are still building your DLC library from scratch, prioritize Rights of Man, Emperor, or Dharma before arriving here. Diego, Scout Team

Europa Universalis IV: Lions of the North (DLC)
SimulationStrategy

Europa Universalis IV: Lions of the North (DLC)

Sep 13, 2022Paradox Development Studio, Paradox TintoParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

Focused Baltic Sea content drop for EU4 that rewires mission trees for several underplayed northern nations. Niche but meaty if those regions are your thing.

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About Europa Universalis IV: Lions of the North (DLC)

Lions of the North is a content expansion for Europa Universalis IV, not a systems overhaul. If you came here hoping for new mechanics, a reworked economy, or AI improvements, this is not that pack. What it delivers instead is a targeted set of new mission trees and historical decision chains for a cluster of Baltic Sea nations that previously made do with generic mission structures. We are talking about countries like the Teutonic Order, Denmark, Sweden, Livonian Order, Lithuania, Kurland, and several smaller northern tags that rarely got the bespoke treatment that bigger-ticket nations like France or Castile enjoyed. The headline feature is the expanded use of branching missions. Rather than a single linear reward path, several of the new trees ask you to make meaningful choices mid-campaign that push your nation toward historically distinct identities. Sweden can chase a Scandinavian empire or pivot toward Baltic dominance. The Teutonic Order has options reflecting its slow secular transformation. These branches do not just swap flavor text; they gate different power rewards, casus belli access, and province-specific modifiers, which means your build order in the first few decades actually matters differently depending on which branch you are targeting. That is the kind of decision-making depth EU4 players want from paid content. For players who already have 500 hours logged and have exhausted the interesting starts in Western Europe and the Ottomans, the Baltic region is genuinely underexplored. Kurland runs in particular have a cult following in the community because the tag starts tiny and landlocked-adjacent, and Lions of the North gives that run more scaffolding. The mission trees here provide clearer progression goals and more reasons to engage with the specific regional HRE politics and the Northern Crusades context. If you have never played a Baltic campaign, this DLC lowers the barrier because you now have guided objectives rather than staring at a blank map wondering what to do with Riga. The weaknesses are real, though. Lions of the North does not touch AI behavior for these nations, so you will still watch the Teutonic Order collapse into irrelevance in most observer games without human intervention. The content is also narrow by design. If your regular EU4 sessions center on Iberia, Ming, or anything south of Hamburg, you will get essentially zero value from this purchase. The branching mission gimmick, while well-executed here, is something Paradox introduced in earlier DLC, so veteran players will not find it novel. And at launch there were documented interactions where certain mission rewards conflicted with existing DLC events, though patches have addressed most of those. From a mod ecosystem standpoint, the new mission trees slot cleanly into major overhaul mods like MEIOU and Taxes and Anbennar, which is a practical consideration if you play modded. The Steam Workshop integration means community patches for edge-case bugs arrive fast. That is one place EU4's age works in its favor: a well-maintained mod pipeline that fixes what Paradox misses. Bottom line for the spreadsheet-minded: Lions of the North is a regional specialist purchase. Run the numbers on your own playtime. If Baltic or Scandinavian campaigns represent a meaningful chunk of what you want to do next in EU4, the branching missions alone justify the add-on. If you are still building your DLC library from scratch, prioritize Rights of Man, Emperor, or Dharma before arriving here. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamBranching MissionsBaltic CampaignsDLC Content PackMission TreesHistorical DecisionsTeutonic OrderRegional FocusGrand Strategy DLC

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Game Info

Developer
Paradox Development Studio, Paradox Tinto
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
Sep 13, 2022

Features

Single-playerMulti-playerCross-Platform MultiplayerDownloadable ContentSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsSteam WorkshopSteam Cloud+1 more

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