How the FUCK do I play this game?

How the FUCK do I play this game?

Attached: Stellaris.jpg (616x353, 64.74K)

Build some science vessels and have them survey your nearby systems. As they do that, build mining outposts on anything not working in your starting system. When you find good systems, build an outpost on them to claim them, and try to claim sectors that are choke-points rather than spreading yourself thin with multiple ways to be invaded.

From there just research new ships and weapons and prepare for whatever comes.

RP, balance economy and adapt to circumstances.

No, here's a better question. WHY THE FUCK IS DLC ALL $20? ESPECIALLY FOR THIS GAME?

It's honestly one of the easiest paradox games to learn. Lots of science, lots of energy, lots of alloys.

Fanatic xenophobia. Purge and enslave

Can you rebind WASD yet?

take out loans and zerg rush the enemy

I must assume the answer is poorly of you are asking here of all places

Because the developer is a piece of door so does this every time and rabid whale fan boys just lap it up. Oh boy, another race pack 20$ for a couple jpegs better day one buy that shit

stellaris was best at the release of utopia change my mind

then you are filtered (retarded).

eu4 us more fun

Download anime girl mod, make the Imperium of man led by God Empress Miku.

Eu4 is by far the worst paradox game

use your first station to build ships, the more shipyards that station has, the more ships it can build at once.
explore systems with science ships
claim those systems and their resources with construction ships
colonize planets with colony ships. make sure the planet is habitable first (green planet icon in galaxy view)
planets have building slots and district slots
districts make you base resources (energy,minerals,food etc) as well as provide housing and trade value(energy) in the case of city districts
building slots make more specialized stuff, provide amenities as well as bonuses
you slowly gain unity points over time, which can be invested in traditions. finishing a trad tree gives you an ascension perk, which gives good bonuses
you can design your ships in the ship builder, you can find this on the side bar among other things
make sure to always be researching something while all of this happens
paradox jews

>eu4
No. There are terrible garbages like ck3, hoi4 and imperator rome.
A few downgrade patches and dlc roll backs eu4 is salvageable.

You will start with 2 habitable worlds next to your system, unless you are using a weirder origin. Colonize those as fast as possible. Additionally, specialize each world -- don't worry about the per planet deficit, since resources are always shared throughout your entire empire. Since you can designate planet specialization which makes all of a certain job give more output, that means it's more efficient to have 1 planet which is maxed out on a certain job, and another planet for a different job, than to have those jobs split up evenly among two planets. Early on, you might have a few odd districts and buildings, but clean that up after you get more planets.

Eu4 was never good, it gets outshined by every other paradox game in every feature. Hoi has better warfare, CK has better character/diplomacy aspects, Vic has better economic aspects, Stellaris has better expanision/colonisation aspects. It doesn't even have the redeeming element of being a jack of all trades, for example the economic aspects of CK2 is just as good as EU4's. The only reason to play Eu4 is for the setting. CK3 is actually pretty decent by Paradox standards considering it's only 2 years old. It's worse then CK2 right now but it's a good base that will probably be better after a decade of updates and dlcs. Hoi4 is fine as is.

Are any of the DLCs actually worth it?

yeah if you pirate them

They're all free, what the fuck are you talking about?

just buy the subscription

I wouldn't play the game without any DLCs. You can just pirate them. They go on sale pretty regularly also. 20 dollars is a bit much, but at like ~5 dollars each I think they are a pretty fair value.