Dragon’s Dogma 2 is seemingly an excellent sport, when it is not buggy or shocking its gamers with microtransactions.
CD Projekt Pink aren’t any stranger to releasing buggy video games, however they’re much less eager on microtransactions – a minimum of for singleplayer video games. In an interview with a Polish investor website, CDPR’s chief monetary officer Piotr Nielubowicz stated that they “don’t see a spot for microtransactions within the case of singleplayer video games”, however they would not rule it out for multiplayer.
The interview, performed by way of Stockwatch.pl and machine-translated by Google, included a query about whether or not mictroasactions will probably be added to future CD Projekt Pink video games. Thanks, JuiceHead.
“We don’t see a spot for microtransactions within the case of singleplayer video games, however we do dnot rule out tha twe will use this answer sooner or later within the case of multiplayer initiatives,” Nielubowicz replied.
CDPR are at the moment primarily engaged on The Witcher 4, with the Nielubowicz saying round 400 builders – rather less than the goal workforce measurement – are at the moment engaged on the sport. They’re additionally within the early phases of growing a Cyberpunk 2077 sequel, and are working with an exterior studio to supply a remake of The Witcher 1. All of those are primarily singleplayer video games, clearly.
Beforehand, The Witcher sequence and Cyberpunk 2077 have had in-game objects bundled with varied particular editions of the bottom sport, after which a number of post-release DLCs which supply substantial new tales. The latest was Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty, which was nice.
My present PC is getting fairly previous – it is from 2017 – and infrequently I take into consideration upgrading it. Each time I take into consideration what I’d play after the improve, I largely simply contemplate re-playing Cyberpunk 2077 for a 3rd time however with fancier graphics settings.