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Cyberpunk 2077
A neon-drenched RPG where your build, choices, and attitude sculpt a gritty, human story beneath the chrome.
Quick Facts
- Platforms
- pc, ps5, xbox, steamdeck
- Price
- standard
- Playtime
- long
- Difficulty
- Medium, with plenty of build freedom but a lot of systems, lore, and combat styles to absorb
- Modes
- Solo open-world RPG
Best For
- Players who want a story-forward RPG with expressive builds and a dense modern setting
- PS5 or high-end PC players looking for a big single-player world with style and combat variety
- Anyone who likes moral gray zones, side stories, and character-driven questlines
Skip If
- Players who want a lighter tone, family-friendly world, or very guided pacing
- Anyone who dislikes first-person RPG structure, UI density, or long dialogue stretches
- People looking for a compact campaign they can finish quickly
Watch Trailer
Cyberpunk 2077 is a neon-drenched RPG where your build, choices, and attitude sculpt a gritty, human story beneath the chrome.
Why It Stands Out
Beyond the spectacle, Night City is about identity — who you become when ambition collides with consequence. The 2.0 overhaul and Phantom Liberty expansion reshaped systems into a leaner, punchier design: perks feel purposeful, combat has bite, and the city finally supports the fantasy of being a merc who improvises under pressure.
Conversations matter, not just for branching outcomes but for tone — how you empathize, bluff, or burn bridges echoes later. It’s an RPG that remembers small kindnesses and sharp betrayals, then uses them to color the finale you earn.
Gameplay
- Rebuilt progression (2.0). Perk trees are focused and thematic — Netrunner, Solo, Techie, etc. — with synergies that change how you approach encounters. Cyberware caps and armor-from-implants shift power from loot screens to body mod decisions.
- Combat that rewards intent. Gunplay is crisp; quickhacks enable remote control and crowd disruption; stealth is viable with smart optics; melee is feral with sandy/berserk highs. You pick the plan: breach from a rooftop, ghost through vents, or kick the door and let chrome sing.
- Night City as a character. Districts have distinct cultures, slang, and music. Markets hum, alleys whisper, and corporate plazas gleam. Side gigs feel like short films — quirky, tense, or tender — and often carry better storytelling than mainline blockbusters.
- Vehicles and police revamp. Chases, car combat, and a saner wanted system make cruising and chaos both fun. Driving models vary by class; motorbikes are still the kings of agility.
- Phantom Liberty excellence. Dogtown is dense and dangerous; espionage vibes, new cyberware, and moral pressure cookers lead to some of the game’s sharpest writing and endings. Idris Elba’s performance anchors a mature, twisting narrative.
- Visuals and tech. Path tracing/Overdrive can turn the city into a light-and-shadow showcase on capable rigs; DLSS/FSR help balance ambition with frames. Console versions post-next-gen patches are stable and handsome, though the absolute pinnacle remains high-end PC.
Who Should Play It
Players who want a story-forward RPG with expressive builds, snappy combat, and a city that rewards curiosity; fans of sci‑fi noir and moral gray zones.
Platforms
PC / PlayStation / Xbox / Steam Deck (Runs on Steam Deck with tuned settings; next-gen console versions are the recommended baseline. No native Switch or mobile.)
Price
- Frequent discounts; the 2.0 systems are free for all base-game owners.
- Phantom Liberty is paid DLC and strongly recommended — it elevates the narrative and mechanics.
- Not consistently included in major subscriptions; watch seasonal sale windows for deep cuts.