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Al, Jack, and Timothy examine Paradox Interactive's business practices, from their DLC-heavy approach to their handling of development studios. The conversation covers why Paradox games launch incomplete, the nearly £400 cost of owning all Stellaris content, and what happened between Paradox and Colossal Order over City Skylines 2.
The episode compares Paradox's model to other strategy publishers like Creative Assembly and Firaxis, discussing why sequels never arrive for flagship titles while DLC releases continue for years. The hosts explore whether this represents smart business or exploitation of a captive audience, why the community accepts buggy launches as standard practice, and how Paradox's treatment of satellite studios creates human costs behind the games.
Discussion includes EU5's troubled launch, the subscription model as an alternative to buying hundreds of pounds in DLC, and why mod support serves business interests rather than altruism. Despite criticizing the practices, all three hosts admit they'll continue playing Paradox games because no other developer makes grand strategy titles at this scale.
By Critical Moves Podcast4.9
77 ratings
Al, Jack, and Timothy examine Paradox Interactive's business practices, from their DLC-heavy approach to their handling of development studios. The conversation covers why Paradox games launch incomplete, the nearly £400 cost of owning all Stellaris content, and what happened between Paradox and Colossal Order over City Skylines 2.
The episode compares Paradox's model to other strategy publishers like Creative Assembly and Firaxis, discussing why sequels never arrive for flagship titles while DLC releases continue for years. The hosts explore whether this represents smart business or exploitation of a captive audience, why the community accepts buggy launches as standard practice, and how Paradox's treatment of satellite studios creates human costs behind the games.
Discussion includes EU5's troubled launch, the subscription model as an alternative to buying hundreds of pounds in DLC, and why mod support serves business interests rather than altruism. Despite criticizing the practices, all three hosts admit they'll continue playing Paradox games because no other developer makes grand strategy titles at this scale.

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