Cyberpunk 2077
The city always wins — but you never stop fighting.
Cyberpunk 2077 is the most ambitious open world ever built — and after its rocky start, CD Projekt Red delivered on that ambition. Night City is a place that feels impossibly real. Every alley, every megabuilding, every neon-drenched street corner tells a story about a world that chewed people up and kept spinning.
V's story is a race against time that never lets you breathe. The main quest weaves through corpo conspiracies, gang politics, and existential dread with a confidence that few RPGs can match. Johnny Silverhand isn't just a companion — he's a ghost in your head who challenges every decision you make, and Keanu Reeves delivers a performance that makes you forget it's him.
But it's Night City itself that steals the show. The neon-soaked streets, the corpo towers looming over crumbling megabuildings, the braindance sessions that blur the line between memory and reality. Walking through Japantown at 2 AM while the rain hammers down and a saxophone wails from a rooftop bar — that's not a game. That's a place you've been. A world you remember.