
Hearts of Iron III has several thousand individually modeled territories, of which around 10,000 are on the land. It's not just the decisions you're making at a high level either. That's just one small slice of a very large pie that also includes technology, diplomacy, espionage, military organization, theater strategy and even the occasional intervention in concerns over freedom of the press, worker strikes and suspicion of government officials. The new HQ command system makes organizing attacks so much easier. And that's not even considering that your factories are also responsible for upgrades and reserves for units in the field and for the production of new combat units, ports, radar stations and such. Now you need to balance your nation's industrial capacity between the two so your people are happy enough to keep working and your soldiers aren't left unsupplied on the battlefield. When they help increase production, you can start cranking out supplies for your soldiers, but dissent has risen because you cut consumer goods, so your population isn't producing as much as they were before. When facing a supply shortage, for instance, you may reduce consumer goods in order to trade other commodities on the world market in return for rare metals that your factories need. While it sounds like the player would soon get bogged down under such an avalanche of seemingly minor details, the sum total of all those individual details can add up to huge consequences. In one of our games, the Chinese crushed the Japanese invasion and Russia was able to liberate Europe by the end of 1943. While the general alliances of the main powers are fixed, the game can go in many interesting directions from there. So you may play a game where France holds out in a war against Vichy France, or where the US joins the Allies in 1937, or where Ecuador and Peru find themselves drawn into the alliances and wind up fighting their own war in South America. The game also improves on the scripted history of Hearts of Iron II with the addition of new decisions and laws that come up according to preset conditions. And while that's true of many grand strategy games, Hearts of Iron III gets down to such details as hiring and firing specific cabinet ministers, licensing designs for foreign production, building individual brigades, setting invasion times to take advantage of daylight and weather effects, and selecting sites for new rocket test labs. Players can choose to lead any nation they want, from Canada to South Afrika to Japan, and will be in charge of selecting domestic policies, research goals, production priorities, diplomatic positions and army and navy orders. It also includes a number of pre-set dates so players can jump right into the action after a key moment.

Hearts of Iron III is a grand strategy game on a global scale that starts in 1936 and ends in 1947.
