Some games—even some studios—go under after a botched start, but when the hopefully revamped 'Cyberpunk 2077' goes back on sale the developers will be hoping they emulate the revival of games like 'No Man's Sky'
Visitors walk past the Cyberpunk 2077 stand at the Video games trade fair Gamescom in Cologne, western Germany, on August, 2019. Image: Ina Fassbender / AFP
Retro-futurist video game Cyberpunk 2077 will be back in the Playstation store on Monday after a disastrous launch marred by bugs forced a 184-day time-out.
But can a blockbuster game recover from the reputational hit of a failed roll-out? Sometimes, as other titles have shown, one can.
"Redemption is possible," said Yohan Bensemhoun, game tester for jeuxvideo.com. "But it's risky. Fail twice and you're done."
CD Projekt's dark future roleplaying title had been hotly anticipated after the studio's work on the groundbreaking The Witcher III, but gamers were disappointed when the game first appeared and an online storm damaged confidence.
Some games—even some studios—go under after such a botched start, but when the hopefully revamped Cyberpunk 2077 goes back on sale the developers will be hoping they emulate the revival of games like "No Man's Sky".