cyberpunk 2077 choices

Cyberpunk 2077 to Explore the Complexities of Action and Consequence

CD Projekt RED is known for delivering narratives where a refusal to limit characters to binary choices is apparent. The tenets of good and evil often mix, positioning characters in morally gray situations. Choice exists at the center of each situation, choices that sometimes presents themselves at a moment’s notice. In every Witcher title, such stories are told in both side missions and the overarching narrative. The nuance of decision-making appears in moments big and small. This is largely due to the world of the Witcher crafted by author Andrzej Sapkowski. Cyberpunk 2077 aims to follow the same blueprint.

However, this time the influence doesn’t come from a series of short stories and novels. Rather, Cyberpunk 2077 is adapted from Cyberpunk 2020, a tabletop RPG created by Mike Pondsmith who’s working closely with the developer. In an interview with LastKnownMeal on Youtube, he teases how action and consequence permeate the narrative.

“One of the binding philosophies of the game is that your actions have consequences. And that also goes back to the original sources in the tabletop game. In the tabletop game, there is no system for karma; good things and so forth. But you can pretty much guess that if you blow away some guy in a gang, his gang’s going to remember, and they’re going to find you. That is realistic, that is the way things really go.”

Pondsmith adds that karma, too, bears complexities that exceed black and white or good and bad.

“Sometimes karma isn’t really meted out in a nice, neat, ‘dark side, light side’ way. Sometimes it comes and bites you in the butt in ways you never expected. We were kidding the other day in the office about that moment when you’re driving on the freeway, and somebody cuts you off, and you flip them off, and then you go into the back, and there’s the guy you flipped off behind the counter! This sort of stuff happens.”

Cyberpunk 2077’s choices seem as though they may beget significant outcomes in even trivial actions. If so, what does this entail for the game overall? Will one player’s playthrough look drastically different from another’s?

Many of our burning question won’t soon receive answers, especially since the game isn’t due out for a long while.

[Source via VGR]

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