Review: Cyberpunk 2077 Explores Another Lawless Dystopia
In the game's Phantom Liberty expansion, those who make the laws rarely follow them.
![A promotional image from Cyberpunk 2077 A promotional image from Cyberpunk 2077 | <em>Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty</em>/CD PROJEKT](https://d2eehagpk5cl65.cloudfront.net/img/c800x450-w800-q80/uploads/2024/01/miniscyberpunk-800x450.jpg)
In Cyberpunk 2077, a video game based on the 1988 tabletop game Cyberpunk, players assumed the role of V, a technologically modified denizen of Night City, a sprawling West Coast megalopolis populated by outlaws, criminals, and corrupt politicians. Phantom Liberty, an expansion and follow-up to the original game, takes players to Dogtown, a quasi-anarchist society walled off from Night City. It's run by a militia, and laws barely apply.
In the game's opening moments, the president of what remains of the United States crashes into militia territory. V must escort the president to safety while working with a mysterious AI and unraveling a secretive conspiracy that reaches to the top levels of government as well as to influential private military contractors. Both installments paint a dark portrait of a technologically enhanced future in which those who make laws rarely follow them.
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