
The trade system adds a new dimension to the great trade empires of the period. The great personalities of the past are on hand to support you as you make your mark on thousands of historical events.Įnjoy hundreds of years of gameplay in a lush topographical map complete with dynamic seasonal effects. Nation building is completely flexible and the possibilities are endless.Įxperience the new system of monarch power where your choices are influenced by the caliber of the man or woman you have at the top and will direct the ebb and flow of gameplay.
New Music: Our composers have been hard at work writing new songs to quiet the stormy seas of commerce. New Unit Pack: New army designs for British nations, including regional Irish units and revolting nations like Northumberland or Cornwall, as well as new music.
Rule Britannia’s game improvements are packaged with:
Knowledge Sharing: Help your lagging allies or subjects by promoting the spread of institutions in their realms. Anglicanism: A new Protestant faith can appear in England with new bonuses and religious choices. Naval Doctrine: Adopt a general strategy for your fleets, giving you bonuses to ship maintenance, trade power or battle performance.
Innovativeness: Earn rewards for being the first nation to unlock new knowledge, including lower power costs. Industrial Revolution: Highly developed provinces may produce coal in the late game, fueling higher productivity and greater wealth.
New British Missions: New exclusive mission trees for England, Scotland and Ireland, embedded in our new Europa Universalis IV mission system. Master wind and trade, and spark industrial revolution in Rule Britannia, a new Immersion Pack for Europa Universalis IV. But the nation that would become Great Britain would rule a trade empire that spanned the globe, exporting ideals of English freedom - both of thought and trade - while making itself the most powerful nation the world had yet seen. It would be a difficult path, through civil wars, religious upheaval, great fires and awkward unions. Weakened by wars on the continent, with a feeble monarch and rapacious nobles, England in the mid-15th century had no inkling of the glories to come.