Thanks to various tricks and assuming you have a Cyberpsycho bike, Cyberpunk 2077 continues to deliver a masterful graphical punch, as this video excellently demonstrates.
Despite its 2020 release, Cyberpunk 2077 continues to be one of the best-looking games of its generation, thanks to the integration of the latest technologies from NVIDIA and the support of a passionate community. A new video from Digital Dreams shows us all this in a striking way.
Cyberpunk 2077 is getting closer and closer to the border between the virtual and the real
If Cyberpunk 2077 often takes a place in benchmarks to evaluate the performance of new graphics cards or processors, it is for very good reasons. A true concentrate of the latest technologies, the CD Projekt RED title continues to be a graphics standard almost four years after its release. With the release of Phantom Liberty, it notably served as a technical showcase for DLSS 3.5, path tracing and even image generation, technologies exclusive to NVIDIA’s RTX 4000.
The result is a game that is visually impressive on its own, but the modders have taken things even further by pushing all of Cyberpunk 2077’s parameters to their limits. Digital Dreams That’s why we’re back with a stunning video that illustrates all of this, all in 8K with more than 300 mods used. The result borders on photorealism at times, thanks to the superbly implemented reflections and weather effects that evoke believability.
Of course, to show off such capabilities in complete fluidity, you need to be equipped with a truly monstrous PC. Digital Dreams shows in this case a very powerful configuration: RTX 4090, Ryzen 9 7950X, 60 GB DDR5 6000 MHz RAM and an M.2 NVMe Samsung 970 EVO SSD.
There, live Night City, live Night City?
However, Cyberpunk 2077 now has to rely exclusively on modders to keep it in top shape, both graphically and in other aspects. CD Projekt RED has officially ended its development and is now happy with its state, actually wanting to look to the future and focus on The Witcher 4 and Cyberpunk 2. After a chaotic launch, especially on PS4 and Xbox One, 2077 has experienced a great redemption.
For the sake of the Polish studio, let’s hope that their next games do better upon release. Switching to Unreal Engine 5 instead of the capricious in-house RED Engine could help them with that. In any case, that’s all we want for the sequels to the two now iconic licenses.