
Unfortunately that second personality came with a price – imminent death. It’s easily one of my favorite new properties, and I absolutely devoured it.Ĭyberpunk 2077 told the story of V, a runner who, through a cavalcade of bravado-based stupidity, ended up with a prototype hitchhiker copy of a long-dead terrorist/rocker named Johnny Silverhand. I have every achievement in the game and have beaten the game twice. Six months more and I tried again and it finally caught me, and boy did it. Six months later I installed it again and watched my main choom Jackie Welles twist like a tornado, drilling himself through the floor and breaking one of the very first quests and uninstalled it again.

I shelved it with the promise to myself that I’d go back to it eventually. I wanted to love this world the team had built, but damn if it just wouldn’t let me. I made it a dozen or so hours into the game, lost my save file twice, and just threw up my hands in frustration. I’m going to straight up – I ran into every single bug with the launch of Cyberpunk 2077 at least thrice, and I was playing on PC. Speaking of the story, let’s start there and then we’ll get back to the “and then some”, shall we? In it, we are certainly getting plenty of fresh post-capitalistic goodness, but that’s not telling even half the story. Not to be reproduced without permission.We got to sit down with the CD Projekt Red team at Summer Game Fest to check out Phantom Liberty, the upcoming expansion to the Cyberpunk 2077 universe.



