Compare Tropico 4: Voodoo (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Haemimont Games. Published by Kalypso Media Digital. Released on 7/25/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

A voodoo-themed story DLC for Tropico 4 that drops a Soviet sorceress on your island. Short, quirky, and built for fans already deep in the base game.

Tropico 4: Voodoo is a small story-driven DLC expansion for Haemimont Games' Caribbean dictatorship sim, dropping a supernatural wrinkle into the normally politics-and-economics-focused formula. The setup is absurd in the best Tropico tradition: your island's last voodoo priest dies due to poor healthcare (a stat you almost certainly neglected), and a Soviet sorceress named Vanya shows up to curse El Presidente. It is goofy, it is on-brand, and it lasts about as long as a lunch break. From a systems perspective, this is not the kind of DLC that rewires your build priorities or introduces a new faction to manage. If you came expecting new edicts, production chains, or a meaningful expansion of the political pressure mechanics that make Tropico 4 worth playing, temper those expectations hard. What Voodoo delivers is a self-contained scenario with a light narrative thread and a handful of mission-specific objectives layered on top of the familiar city-builder loop. The voodoo premise influences scripted events more than it touches the underlying simulation, which is either charming or disappointing depending on what you were hoping for. The mixed Steam reception (around 65 percent positive from a small sample) tracks with that reality. Players who bought it expecting substantive mechanical depth came away frustrated. Players who treated it as a cheap story detour in a game they already love reported having a decent time. That split is pretty telling. The AI behavior in the scenario missions does not meaningfully differ from the base game, and there is nothing here for modders to sink their teeth into. The mod ecosystem around Tropico 4 is modest to begin with, and this DLC adds nothing to that layer. For newcomers: Voodoo is emphatically not the entry point. If you have not played the base game to the point where your healthcare budget decisions feel automatic and your faction balancing is reasonably second-nature, this DLC will feel disconnected and thin. Tropico 4 itself is actually a solid place to learn the series, with a campaign that paces its systems introduction reasonably well, but this particular add-on assumes you are already comfortable with the rhythms of island management. Come back to it after you have run a few islands into the ground learning why your entertainment budget matters. Bottom line for the strategy-minded buyer: Voodoo scratches an itch for Tropico 4 completionists or players who want a short, low-stakes detour with some narrative flavor. It does not expand the decision space in any meaningful way, and the late-game depth you might be chasing simply is not here. Treat it as a palate cleanser between longer campaigns, not as a content injection that justifies revisiting the game from scratch. Diego, Scout Team

Tropico 4:  Voodoo (DLC)
SimulationStrategy

Tropico 4: Voodoo (DLC)

Jul 25, 2013Haemimont GamesKalypso Media Digital
GamerScout Says

A voodoo-themed story DLC for Tropico 4 that drops a Soviet sorceress on your island. Short, quirky, and built for fans already deep in the base game.

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

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Tropico 4: Voodoo (DLC)

Tropico 4: Voodoo is a small story-driven DLC expansion for Haemimont Games' Caribbean dictatorship sim, dropping a supernatural wrinkle into the normally politics-and-economics-focused formula. The setup is absurd in the best Tropico tradition: your island's last voodoo priest dies due to poor healthcare (a stat you almost certainly neglected), and a Soviet sorceress named Vanya shows up to curse El Presidente. It is goofy, it is on-brand, and it lasts about as long as a lunch break. From a systems perspective, this is not the kind of DLC that rewires your build priorities or introduces a new faction to manage. If you came expecting new edicts, production chains, or a meaningful expansion of the political pressure mechanics that make Tropico 4 worth playing, temper those expectations hard. What Voodoo delivers is a self-contained scenario with a light narrative thread and a handful of mission-specific objectives layered on top of the familiar city-builder loop. The voodoo premise influences scripted events more than it touches the underlying simulation, which is either charming or disappointing depending on what you were hoping for. The mixed Steam reception (around 65 percent positive from a small sample) tracks with that reality. Players who bought it expecting substantive mechanical depth came away frustrated. Players who treated it as a cheap story detour in a game they already love reported having a decent time. That split is pretty telling. The AI behavior in the scenario missions does not meaningfully differ from the base game, and there is nothing here for modders to sink their teeth into. The mod ecosystem around Tropico 4 is modest to begin with, and this DLC adds nothing to that layer. For newcomers: Voodoo is emphatically not the entry point. If you have not played the base game to the point where your healthcare budget decisions feel automatic and your faction balancing is reasonably second-nature, this DLC will feel disconnected and thin. Tropico 4 itself is actually a solid place to learn the series, with a campaign that paces its systems introduction reasonably well, but this particular add-on assumes you are already comfortable with the rhythms of island management. Come back to it after you have run a few islands into the ground learning why your entertainment budget matters. Bottom line for the strategy-minded buyer: Voodoo scratches an itch for Tropico 4 completionists or players who want a short, low-stakes detour with some narrative flavor. It does not expand the decision space in any meaningful way, and the late-game depth you might be chasing simply is not here. Treat it as a palate cleanser between longer campaigns, not as a content injection that justifies revisiting the game from scratch. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamDLCScenario ModeStory-DrivenCity-BuilderSatiricalShort Campaign

System Requirements

System requirements for Tropico 4: Voodoo (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
65%(31)

Game Info

Developer
Haemimont Games
Publisher
Kalypso Media Digital
Release Date
Jul 25, 2013

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Haemimont Games