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The whole globe is up for grabs and you can jump in from 1936, before the political landscape of wartime has taken shape, or you can leap into the thick of things at 1939 or even 1941. You can take control of one of eight major nations, ranging from the obvious--Germany, Great Britain and Russia--through to the likes of nationalist China. You can also opt to play the role of any minor nation, though the challenge becomes very different as you are frequently forced to ally with whichever major force approaches your territory first and then hope for the best.
The game will look very familiar to fans of Europa Universalis and its sequel. There's a good reason for this: Hearts of Iron is built on an adapted version of the engine. It drives the game's massive depth and scope, but also causes some problems. The interface is clunky at times and struggles to cope with the masses of information available. Also, the map territories don't always make a lot of sense. Perseverance is required, but also rewarded.
The level of micro management is intense, but gives you full control. It ranges from choosing to research nuclear technology at the expense of building more advanced conventional military might to staging coups in opposing countries. You just don't get the chance to play out WWII at this level every day and that's reason enough to pick up this game, put up with its sometimes annoying foibles and revel in global conquest. --Jason Weston
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Different.......,
This review is from: Hearts of Iron (Video Game)
This is the kind of game that harks back to those table top war games you played in the pr-PC era. The interface may look rather retro, or "clunky", as I have seen it described, but it has an old fashioned style not seen in modern war games and a theme not seen anywhere else.Mixing Diplomacy, Warfare and a frightening level of economic management Hearts of Iron suceeds on most levels, but falls a little short sometimes due to the sheer scale and complexity. This is a game you have to work at, learn, and have to think at many levels to suceed. If you want to spend some time working at a game, rather than just going along with the flow, then give this a go.It has a strong AI and the myrid of options and areas to get to grips with. Worth a try for someone looking for a different kind of strategy game. Well...back to trying conquer the world!
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Heart Of Iron (after the patches),
This review is from: Hearts of Iron (Video Game)
Hearts Of Iron is truly a game for the more strategic of computer players. However, even through a poor manual, the basic aspects of the game are easily discovered, although micro-management is not especially easy at first. It's indepth, although it ignores some important historical events, and combat, although almost graphically non-existent (it is calculated almost RPG style, through certain combat modifiers added onto your divisions abilities), is always something that will keep you watching certain areas of the game.Unfortunately, the 'released version' doesn't seem to be like a release version at all. There are a few major bugs, and the historical data, technical, militarily and diplomatically, seems ridiculously poorly collected, especially for the minor nations(and some larger too). However, fortunately after its release the developers released several patches (version 1.05 at the moment) that not only fix most of the bugs, but totally update the division names, tank/ship/plane types and leaders/ministers. There are also several user-made mods, that add even more to the game through added events and units. After this minor problem, the game really opens up. You can form divisions, fighter squadrons and fleets, research your own way to victory through dominating on the land, air, sea or even with nuclear weapons. As well as this, you can invade almost any country in the world, then annex it and add its resources to your own. All the time this is happening, the basic events that lead to WW2 occur as well. So you may wish to be Argentina and conquer South America, whilst the worlds eyes are looking towards Europe and not at you. Or be Russia and conquer Europe before Germany even starts to look at Poland. The AI has been constructed reasonably well for all the difficulty levels (of which you can choose difficulty, and the aggressiveness of the AI), although on the highest aggressive level the enemy countries tend to throw away their armies easily. However, some preset AI events are annoying, for example, when playing Germany, even if you succumb to every single Allied request and play them as a 'nice' country, France, Britain and Russia will still declare war on you. The sheer size of HOI is what makes it so fun and interesting to play, and although it seems big at first, it does not take long to master the basics. You do not need an infinite knowledge of WW2 to play this game, but it certainly does help. However you must be dedicated to slogging it out with an enemy whose tactics can be clever and bold at the same time. As well as this, you must keep your economy going, bring in and protect your supplies and research new equipment for your armed forces. If your not intending to download the patches for this game, its not really worth it, and I'd probably only give it 2 stars. However, once you've installed the developers patches and addons, the game really opens up and really allows you to see how history might have turned out if Russia joined the allies before Germany invaded Poland, or the US joined the war early. Or even in Japan landed troops in Australia, or managed to defeat the US Navy. It is this that really makes HOI entertaining.
18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Go on, reshape history,
By
This review is from: Hearts of Iron (Video Game)
Hearts of Iron recreates the global events from 1936 to '47 - you take control of a nation (USA, UK, France, Germany, China, Russia, Italy) and steer it to victory. You have to manage research, troop production and convoys to keep your nation happy, and you can manipulate other nations to try to bring them over to your way of thinking.The game is stable, and plays well on my 433mhz celeron. Graphics are Ok for the type of game, and you can control the speed to be able to cope with events as they occur. The interface is well up to the job too, the pause button being the only prob (it's too small!) It can be difficult to watch over far-flung colonies too, till you get the hang of slick use of the zoom buttons. Be warned, though, this is not a frantic shoot 'em up. If you're into strategic games which require you to immerse yourself in the game and keep your eyes on your world assets, and the activities of your neighbours, then you'll like this.
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