Start saving for a new PC now if you want to play CDPR's next big games. The studio's lineup is set with The Witcher 4 expected around 2027, followed much later by the Cyberpunk 2077 sequel, currently called Project Orion. A Polish analysis firm, Noble Securities, just predicted a late 2030 release for that Cyberpunk follow-up. Analyst Mateusz Chrzanowski noted the inclusion of a multiplayer mode is a key reason for the extended timeline and a ballooning budget, estimated at a huge 1.5 billion Polish zloty.
This would place the sequel's launch exactly a decade after the original game's messy debut, marking a potential full redemption arc for the franchise. The report suggests multiplayer integration is actively stretching development time beyond their work on The Witcher 4. This long roadmap gives PC gamers a rough timeline for necessary hardware upgrades, with the more distant Cyberpunk 2 date offering some breathing room. How CDPR implements multiplayer in a series known for single-player stories remains a major open question. The studio's focus is clearly split, with hopes pinned on a successful Witcher 4 release before tackling its next ambitious, and expensive, sci-fi project.
This would place the sequel's launch exactly a decade after the original game's messy debut, marking a potential full redemption arc for the franchise. The report suggests multiplayer integration is actively stretching development time beyond their work on The Witcher 4. This long roadmap gives PC gamers a rough timeline for necessary hardware upgrades, with the more distant Cyberpunk 2 date offering some breathing room. How CDPR implements multiplayer in a series known for single-player stories remains a major open question. The studio's focus is clearly split, with hopes pinned on a successful Witcher 4 release before tackling its next ambitious, and expensive, sci-fi project.