Earlier today, CD Projekt Red unveiled the slides from its autumn investor call. While we were expecting to learn a little more about the future of Cyberpunk 2077, and perhaps even get a release date for The Witcher 3's next-gen port, we got far, far more than that. As well as details about both of those projects, the studio also lifted the lid on a collection of titles big enough to keep fans busy for a decade or more. From multiple Witcher games to a brand-new IP and some high-profile studio maneuvers, here's everything CDPR just announced.
Arguably top of the list is CD Projekt Red's confirmation that The Witcher 4 (known internally as Project Polaris) will be the first game in a trilogy. We already knew that it would be part of a "multi-game saga," but Polaris has now officially been described as the beginning "of a new Witcher trilogy."
That fourth game - teased earlier this year with a unique Witcher medallion thought to represent a lynx - is said to be in pre-production, but all three game are currently "aimed to be delivered within a six-year period following the Polaris release." There's no word on a Witcher 4 release date just yet, but this does mean we should see The Witcher 5 arrive three years after its launch, with The Witcher 6 following three years after that.
Project Sirius is a new project being developed by The Molasses Flood (of The Flame in the Flood fame) and supported by CDPR. It's being described as "an innovative take on The Witcher universe" that will tell an "unforgettable story" for existing and new Witcher fans. It's still in pre-production, which means it's going to be quite a ways off. However, what we do know is that it will offer multiplayer gameplay on top of a single-player experience,
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