Cyberpunk 2077 studio CD Projekt Red very cheekily congratulated Hello Games on the reveal of its ambitious new fantasy game Light no Fire at The Game Awards 2023, seemingly joking about the two studios' respective controversies and eventual redemption arcs.
For some context, Hello Games released No Man's Sky to widespread criticisms that it was missing many of the features promised by studio founder Sean Murray. However, over the years the game has added a handful of massive updates that have effectively improved public perception to the point that No Man's Sky is today considered one of the best open-world games out there and recently took home a Golden Joystick Award for the "Still Playing" category.
Somewhat similarly, Cyberpunk 2077 had a rough launch back in 2020, although that was more-so due to issues like glitches, visual shortcomings, AI goofiness, and progress-blocking crashes. Compare that to today, where Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty won the Golden Joystick Award for best game expansion, and you can see both games have come a long, long way from release.
It seems to be in that spirit that we have this rather surreal interaction between CDPR and Murray:
You can always fix it later.
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