The second was thatThe Witcher 4 will be bigger and better than Cyberpunk 2077.
These may just be buzzwords, but they seem like unwise ones.
Sure, that’s Marketing 101, andCyberpunk 2077 launched in an infamously broken state.
We’refalling back into the same old habits.
The version we got takes place in a decent sized city witha lot of corridors dressed up as buildings.
The Witcher 4 will have more open plains, with forests and towns and keeps scattered across the map.
To walk from one end to the other will probably take longer than it would in Cyberpunk 2077.
That might already be the case forThe Witcher 3, which itself had an impressive map.
But telling people what they want to hear is what brought CDPR to this point.
It’s the fact that CDPR has started to bang this drum that sets off warning sirens.
Peoplelapped up Phantom Liberty’s “the game is fixed!”
aggression, even if many of thenon-bug issues still remained.
Does The Witcher 4 promo tour act as an apology for Cyberpunk 2077?
A victory lap for its recovery from the brink?
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