
CD PROJEKT RED has been extra busy lately on multiple fronts, and now it looks like more DLC might still be coming to Cyberpunk 2077. CDPR has just finished launching the Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition on the Nintendo Switch 2, and the port-over is already getting positive reviews. Meanwhile, it was also recently revealed that the sequel has entered its next phase of development, and the Phantom Liberty paid DLC reached a new sales milestone. So with all this preem news, let’s dig into the latest happenings of Night City.
Yet more content?
Despite rocky launches and a seemingly never-ending amount of bugs, CDPR does consistently manage to release games that often have fans asking for more, more, more. While Cyberpunk 2077 has received many patches adding features, fixes, and content, it is starting to sound like there’s still yet another mission on the way with the upcoming patch 2.3 set to arrive on June 26. News of the inbound patch dropped during a livestream Q&A segment while discussion about the Nintendo Switch 2 version was happening when Senior Community Manager Alicja Kozera stated, “I can tell you right now, we are planning another part for the game,” and “The last one wasn’t the last one.”
As if that tidbit wasn’t tantalizing enough, Global community director Marcin Momot decided to post a cryptic-looking image on social media, also hinting that the forthcoming patch could have more in store than just some QoL updates or new features.
We’re not done yet! Stay tuned for more info about the next Cyberpunk 2077 update coming later this month.
— Marcin Momot (@Marcin360) June 5, 2025
We’ll start spilling the beans closer to the release of patch 2.3 (that’s its name), so for now, we ask for a bit more patience. Let the team cook!🙏 pic.twitter.com/WANfynr33P
Lastly, someone spotted a post on LinkedIn also indicating that work has been done involving writing and character voices for DLC. So while nothing is truly confirmed, yet, it does indeed look as if we could be getting one final mission for Cyberpunk 2077. Given that there’s another game in development, there could be an intended tie-in planned.
Cyberpunk 2
CDPR recently said in its Q1 2025 financial report that the sequel previously known as Project Orion has proceeded to its next phase of development and is now being referred to as Cyberpunk 2. The team working on the next game has been slightly increased while the bulk of CDPR’s staff continues to work on The Witcher IV. The next game is currently being worked on by those who helped develop the Phantom Liberty DLC at CDPR’s North American branches.
Per Mike Pondsmith (via VGC):
“I spent a lot of time talking to one of the environment guys, and he was explaining how the new place… because there’s another city that we visit, and I’m not telling you anymore than that, but there’s another city that we visit. Night City is still there.”
Not much has been revealed about the next instalment, but Cyberpunk creator Mike Pondsmith shared at the recent Digital Dragons 2025 conference how during a recent visit to one of CDPR’ studios, he chatted with some staff about the work in progress. It sounds as if there will be another city in the next story but Night City is still present.
“I remember looking at it and going, ‘I understand the feel that you’re going for, and this really does work, it doesn’t feel like Blade Runner, it feels more like Chicago gone wrong’. And I said, ‘yeah, I can see this working’.”
Phantom Liberty Sales Milestone
Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty is its first, and so far, only major DLC that has been released. The paid content launched in the fall of 2023 and is nearing its 2nd anniversary. It also continued a similar trend by the developer to add new content by expanding new areas of the game, as happened with The Witcher 3: Blood and Wine expansion pack, by introducing a new district called Dogtown. CDPR also revealed in its earnings call that the paid DLC has sold more than 10 million units.
Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition Switch 2 reviews
CB2077 has to some degree become the poster child of modern graphical technical advances, with a major focus on NVIDIA technologies, which have provided significant support to CDPR to implement. Additionally, Nintendo has used custom NVIDIA processors in both of its Switch hybrid consoles. However, given how demanding the game can be on even the most powerful systems, more than a few folks wondered how it would perform on what is essentially a mobile device, which gets a performance mode boost when plugged in. Well, overall the reviews (1, 2) for the Switch 2 version are positive, and while it sounds like some graphical bugs managed to be carried over, NVIDIA’s magical sauce, aka DLSS and other AI technologies, have managed to keep things smooth at 1080p, albeit 40 FPS while docked, and 720p in mobile mode. Attempts, with mixed results, have also been made to adapt the game to the Switch 2’s controls.