Understand “It’s happening” Klaxon, friends, because it is happening: CD Projekt today announced that Cyberpank 2- Joe, by the way, the studio is now calling Cyberpank 2 instead of Project Oran-now in the “pre-production phase” of development.
This is not the biggest surprise of the year-we since 2023 knows that a new cyberpank game works from a new Boston branch of CDPR, after all and “pre-production” is still very early in this process. Nevertheless, Piyotr Nilubovic, Chief Financial Officer of CD Project, said that it is a very big thing while highlighting today’s earnings.
“Phantom Liberty expansion has reached another sales milestone, bought by 10 million gamers,” Nielubowicz said. “This is an excellent result, given that only 20 months have passed since its release, and it confirms the continuous interest in the Cyberpank universe from the gaming community.
“Looking at these developments, it fills me with more satisfaction to declare a more important phase in our work on the next large game in this franchise: several weeks ago, Cyberpank 2-The project was referred to as the project orian-wrote my ideological phase and entered pre-production. Congratulations to the entire team!”

CD projection is still on the Vichar 4, which entered the “full-scale production” at the end of 2024, but Cyberpank 2 will get a boost during 2025: During an investor call, CD Projek’s joint CEO Michael Novakovski said that Cyberpank 2 Development Team “will be our primary recruitment” for 2025.

The brief answer to what it means as a possible release date is that cyberpank 2 sets a very long way. In response to a speculative question, suggesting that the deadline of previous development from pre-produced to full release, Cyberpank 2, puts the release in late 2030 or early 2031, Novakovsky did not disagree.
“I can repeat in a way that I said in one of the previous calls, which was originally that our journey from pre-production to final release takes four to five years on an average,” Novakovsky said. “Saying that, keep in mind that each project is unique, and there are many variables that affect the end result. So I will not take you in specific years, but yes, it’s too much how it looks.”

