Cyberpunk 2077 Has Been Delayed

Cyberpunk 2077 Has Been Delayed

CD Projekt Red has announced that Cyberpunk 2077 has been delayed to September 17, pushing the upcoming RPG back from its original April 16 release date. The game is still scheduled to release for Xbox One, PS4, and PC but is also now launching in a spot that makes it seem more plausible that we can expect an announcement for next-gen versions on Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5.

Official Statement

“We are currently at a state where the game is complete and playable, but there’s still work to be done,” CD Projekt Red wrote in a press release, embedded below. “Night City is massive–full of stories, content, and places to visit, but due to the sheer scale and complexity of it all, we need more time to finish playtesting, fixing, and polishing. We want Cyberpunk 2077 to be our crowning achievement for this generation and postponing launch will give the precious month we need to make the game perfect.” CD Project Red added that there will be “regular updates” on the game’s progress as the September 17 release date approaches.

Night City is the setting for Cyberpunk 2077, and CD Projekt Red said it wants to create the design of the city so that it offers a “unique take” on the Cyberpunk franchise. “When we showed the demo last year, people were surprised at first that it was so sunny,” Cyberpunk 2077 concept art coordinator Marthe Jonkers said in an interview with GamesIndustry.Biz. “They expected rainy, dark cyberpunk but you can make a cyberpunk city in California. Of course, it will rain there, because we have a weather system, and it will also be night, but we are really trying to get this fresh take on cyberpunk.”

The city itself is built with its own history, which takes place over four distinct eras. During entropism, there was intense poverty. Kitsch saw an increase in the low- and middle-class creating and buying colorful and extravagant items. During neomilitarism, the rich invaded Night City and built towering skyscrapers. Finally, neokitsch saw the rich beginning to adopt the more colorful style of the poor when designing buildings. All these styles twist in on each other, creating a city where you can immediately identify when something was built or which time period someone probably comes from.

“There are layers to the design of Night City and all its inhabitants, so when you drive around and you see a building that’s sort of pink with these soft edges, and the windows are sort of soft shaped, you know that this is kitsch style, and you know that was built in that period of time where people had more money back then,” Jonkers said. “It’s telling you a story about the background of the city, and gives an extra layer of believability.”

Original Article

Gamer since the age of 2 when I was introduced to the Dragon 64. Age is just a number, in my head I will be forever young

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