Adam, from eGamer, says: "For awhile, I was missing straight and honest Cyberpunk from my gaming diet. The last game that I can recall playing the Cyberpunk card, with explicit purpose, was Deus Ex: Human Revolution, which reminded me so much of William Gibson’s Neuromancer, and Blade Runner to a larger extent. I’ve always loved Cyberpunk but rarely understood what it was truly about, until reading Neuromancer in college and coming to grips with the genre as a whole. With the upcoming release of Remember Me, and Cyberpunk 2077 around the corner in a year or two, I am once again entranced by the sprawl of Cyberpunk revival in the air. Of course, Cyberpunk came back to the fore with the Matrix and its trilogy, and the Japanese are still producing Cyberpunk-centric anime and manga throughout the years, but gaming is the perfect place for Cyberpunk to find a glorious home of endless possibility".
Source code for CD Projekt's action role-playing games The Witcher 3 and Cyberpunk 2077 have allegedly been compromised.
Well they are using unreal engine now thanks to there work culture and horrific job on making cyberpunk so for the future no impact.
But it will be interesting to see what mods will be made
https://rebel-wolves.com/
Wait a min...I swear to god CP2077's source code got leaked before. CDPR needs to stop using "password123" for all their accounts 😅
Cyberpunk 2077's launch resulted in a loss of goodwill with gamers, but there is a way to earn it back with the upcoming sequel.
They will need to add everything they promised in the first one and not over promise on the second one.
As somebody who has been playing the tabletop games since the 90s and was let down on launch by my PS4 version, you can bet I'm not going the preorder any sequel.
3rd person option, and everything else that was originally promised. Next don't force agenda driven naratives. Finally, release a finished product without need for day one patches.
During CD Projekt’s Fiscal Year 2023 earnings call, CEO Michael Nowakowski said that the company is keen on licensing its IP rights to third-party developers to create mobile adaptations of its titles.