Compare Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Paradox Development. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 10/25/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

Victoria 3 Grand Edition bundles the base game and its expansion pass into one package, covering a century of industrial-age nation-building where supply chains and suffrage matter more than battlefield tactics.

Victoria 3 is Paradox Development Studio's society-builder set between 1836 and 1936, a period crammed with industrialisation, colonialism, class conflict, and the slow, grinding rewrite of what it means to govern. You are not commanding armies on a hex map. You are managing population groups (pops), each simulated on profession, education, religion, and political belief, and trying to keep enough of them fed, employed, and ideologically on-side before someone lights a revolutionary fire under your parliament. That framing is important up front: if you came here expecting a Total War cousin, redirect immediately. If economic theory and political brinkmanship sound like a Saturday well spent, read on. The economic layer is the heart of the game and the thing that will eat your evenings. Every province contains buildings, factories, and resource extractors with trackable input and output metrics. You decide production methods, workforce allocation, and whether to chase raw materials domestically or pull them through trade routes. Tariffs, embargoes, and customs unions are real levers with real downstream consequences. The gold standard mechanic means that hoarding money devalues your currency, so you are constantly incentivised to reinvest into construction or eat the cost of a war. Getting a national supply chain humming is genuinely satisfying in a way that spreadsheet work rarely is. Politics wraps around the economy through the interest group system. Landholders, industrialists, trade unions, religious authorities, the intelligentsia, and rural folk all accumulate clout and push their own legislative agendas. Passing laws, from voting rights to economic organisation to labour protections, requires coalition-building among these groups. Block the wrong reform and the armed forces clique might back a coup. Push too fast on secularisation and the church will turn half your pops into radicals. It is the kind of cascading cause-and-effect that makes a good Paradox game feel like a living simulation rather than a board game with prettier art. For newcomers, the barrier is real but not insurmountable. There are four guided tutorial scenarios covering Sweden, Belgium, Chile, and Cape Colony, plus a Learn-to-Play mode that provides tips without locking you into a railroaded experience. Paradox also produced an official nine-part explainer series before launch. None of that makes the first ten hours painless. Information is spread across nested tooltips and multiple UI tabs, and the AI behavior can be erratic, particularly in how rival nations handle your trade routes. War is deliberately abstracted: you assign generals and admirals to fronts and they fight based on their personality traits, which means matching a defensive general to an offensive role is a punishing lesson you only need once. Veterans of Victoria 2 should know upfront that the warfare simplification is the sharpest criticism the community levelled at launch, and subsequent updates have improved it without fully resolving it. The Grand Edition's expansion pass adds immersion packs, music, and art content that flesh out specific regions and eras, which matters more the deeper into a campaign you get. The Grand Edition is the sensible way to buy in if you are committing to the long game. Late-game pacing can sag once you hit the 1890s and the big structural decisions are behind you, but players chasing alternate history goals, economic dominance runs, or the unification of a fragmented region will always find a new thread to pull. The mod ecosystem is active and adds considerable UI clarity that the base game still lacks. Approached correctly, this is one of the more accessible entry points Paradox has produced for the grand strategy genre, even if that bar remains meaningfully high. Diego, Scout Team

Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key

Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key

Oct 25, 2022Paradox DevelopmentParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

Victoria 3 Grand Edition bundles the base game and its expansion pass into one package, covering a century of industrial-age nation-building where supply chains and suffrage matter more than battlefield tactics.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €36.70

GamerScout Verdict

Best for players who want to argue with industrialists about suffrage reform instead of moving cavalry units around a battlefield.

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About Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key

Victoria 3 is Paradox Development Studio's society-builder set between 1836 and 1936, a period crammed with industrialisation, colonialism, class conflict, and the slow, grinding rewrite of what it means to govern. You are not commanding armies on a hex map. You are managing population groups (pops), each simulated on profession, education, religion, and political belief, and trying to keep enough of them fed, employed, and ideologically on-side before someone lights a revolutionary fire under your parliament. That framing is important up front: if you came here expecting a Total War cousin, redirect immediately. If economic theory and political brinkmanship sound like a Saturday well spent, read on. The economic layer is the heart of the game and the thing that will eat your evenings. Every province contains buildings, factories, and resource extractors with trackable input and output metrics. You decide production methods, workforce allocation, and whether to chase raw materials domestically or pull them through trade routes. Tariffs, embargoes, and customs unions are real levers with real downstream consequences. The gold standard mechanic means that hoarding money devalues your currency, so you are constantly incentivised to reinvest into construction or eat the cost of a war. Getting a national supply chain humming is genuinely satisfying in a way that spreadsheet work rarely is. Politics wraps around the economy through the interest group system. Landholders, industrialists, trade unions, religious authorities, the intelligentsia, and rural folk all accumulate clout and push their own legislative agendas. Passing laws, from voting rights to economic organisation to labour protections, requires coalition-building among these groups. Block the wrong reform and the armed forces clique might back a coup. Push too fast on secularisation and the church will turn half your pops into radicals. It is the kind of cascading cause-and-effect that makes a good Paradox game feel like a living simulation rather than a board game with prettier art. For newcomers, the barrier is real but not insurmountable. There are four guided tutorial scenarios covering Sweden, Belgium, Chile, and Cape Colony, plus a Learn-to-Play mode that provides tips without locking you into a railroaded experience. Paradox also produced an official nine-part explainer series before launch. None of that makes the first ten hours painless. Information is spread across nested tooltips and multiple UI tabs, and the AI behavior can be erratic, particularly in how rival nations handle your trade routes. War is deliberately abstracted: you assign generals and admirals to fronts and they fight based on their personality traits, which means matching a defensive general to an offensive role is a punishing lesson you only need once. Veterans of Victoria 2 should know upfront that the warfare simplification is the sharpest criticism the community levelled at launch, and subsequent updates have improved it without fully resolving it. The Grand Edition's expansion pass adds immersion packs, music, and art content that flesh out specific regions and eras, which matters more the deeper into a campaign you get. The Grand Edition is the sensible way to buy in if you are committing to the long game. Late-game pacing can sag once you hit the 1890s and the big structural decisions are behind you, but players chasing alternate history goals, economic dominance runs, or the unification of a fragmented region will always find a new thread to pull. The mod ecosystem is active and adds considerable UI clarity that the base game still lacks. Approached correctly, this is one of the more accessible entry points Paradox has produced for the grand strategy genre, even if that bar remains meaningfully high.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamSociety BuilderPop SimulationEconomic ManagementInterest Group PoliticsSupply ChainAlternate History SandboxTutorial IncludedExpansion Pass BundledLate-Game Depth

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
10 GB
Graphics
Nvidia® GeForce™ GTX 660 (2GB) or AMD® R7 370 (2GB) or Intel® HD Graphics 630 or AMD Radeon™ Vega 8
Processor
Intel® Core™ i3-3250 or AMD® FX 8370 (AVX support required)
64bit support
Yes
System requirements
Windows® 10 Home 64 Bit

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Game Info

Developer
Paradox Development
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
Oct 25, 2022

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How much does Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key cost?

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What platforms is Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key available on?

Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key is available on PC.

When was Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key released?

Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key was released on 25 October 2022.

Who developed Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key?

Victoria 3 Grand Edition (PC) Steam Key was developed by Paradox Development and published by Paradox Interactive.