Recently we had the big announcement of Europa Universalis V from Paradox Interactive / Paradox Tinto. Now we know it will only officially support Windows.
Quite a break in tradition here for an in-house Paradox strategy title. Their previous games Victoria 3, Imperator: Rome, Stellaris, Europa Universalis IV, Crusader Kings II + Crusader Kings III and Hearts of Iron IV all had both Native Linux and macOS support.
Originally, their press team couldn't give me an answer when asked if Linux would be supported, simply telling me the press release info was all they were giving out. However, on the official Paradox forum there's a reply to a post asking about macOS from Paradox Tinto's Studio Manager, Johan Andersson, that clearly says:
There are currently no plans for anything else than Steam and Windows.
At least on Linux, you should hopefully be able to run it with Valve's Proton. Still, a shame to see such a big series move away from direct support.
I've always enjoyed Paradox games, and they were one of the few companies I pre-ordered from and tried to buy early and at full price, because of the quality of the games and their Linux support. However, their quality has dropped and I'd already begun buying and playing them less due to that. The removal of native Linux support doesn't mean I'll ignore their games, but the accompanying issues with bugs and many DLCs being a bit sparse for the price means that no native Linux pushes them even more into ones that I will likely only buy later in a heavy sale.
Let's see if with this unpopular move they can finally produce some occasional release that is not a complete bugfest. That is one of the main reasons I stopped playing their games. Even though on linux it was less annoying than windows due to much faster loading times.
I love EUIV and Victoria 3. I played a lot of Victoria 2, CK II, CK III and Hearts of Iron IV.
I bought the games and all DLCs, but I won't do this anymore now that they are dropping Linux support.
I'll of course play EUV, maybe from an "alternative way", maybe I'll buy if I find a great sale, but this move is very disappointing.
For my part I am in favor of having a single executable that works on any OS, at the development level it is very difficult to justify native support for OS with so little market share.
If PDX is switching engines for the game, that would explain why they dropped Mac + Linux and also give me hope for a more optimized game client.
They probably are using a bumped version of Clausewitz.
But if in 2025 the boardroom approves a new engines that does not support linux it doesn't bode well for PDX long term. They are in full short term cashgrab to appease the stock market. Which btw is the signal they are giving since quite a few years already (as I said before, I grew tired of them sistematically not delivering what promised time ago). They are regularly offsetting poor DLC quality with more aggressive commercial campaigns.
It will work until it breakes. When it does, there will be no fallback. It sucks because there aren't many grand strategy alternatives of this magnitude around. So one virtually has to give up the genre entirely.
On the bright side, should EU4 be somehow decent on its last patch, I might buy the last DLCs on some post eu5 release sale and have illimited playtime on EU4.
Personally, I can live with it. If a game runs on Linux I don't care about what makes it run.
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