CD Projekt has confirmed that Phantom Liberty, the upcoming Cyberpunk 2077 expansion featuring Keanu Reeves and Sasha Grey that will open up an all-new district of Night City, will not be free.
That Cyberpunk 2077 players will have to fork over some cash for Phantom Liberty might seem obvious—I certainly thought so—but to be fair, CD Projekt muddied the waters a good bit with The Witcher 3, a morass of DLC, expansions, and content, some of it free and much of it not. I mean, just look at this:
(Image credit: Steam)
The studio promised similar things for Cyberpunk 2077, saying in August 2020 that it would get free DLC as well. It didn’t get into specifics about how the post-launch content would break down, but it didn’t really matter because the plan quickly went off the rails as CD Projekt was forced to focus on fixing the game rather than expanding it. The first free DLC showed up in August 2021 and it did not impress, even though, you know, it was free.
CD Projekt has previously differentiated between free DLC and paid expansions for Cyberpunk 2077, albeit in the relatively low-profile forum of a 2021 investors call.
“There is a distinction—for us at least—between DLCs and expansions,” CD Projekt’s Michał Nowakowski said at the time. “I’d like to remind about that: A DLC is a smaller piece of content which we have been giving away for free in the past with The Witcher 3, and that’s still the plan for Cyberpunk.
“When it comes to expansions, such as Blood and Wine and Hearts of Stone, that is a bigger thing. These are paid, and once we announce something like that for Cyberpunk, it will definitely be paid.”
It’s hard to imagine that a whole new story featuring two notable names and a previously-unseen part of the city could be considered “a smaller piece of content,” but just in case there was any doubt, CD Projekt’s global PR director Radek Grabowski confirmed with GamesRadar that Phantom Liberty “will be a paid one.” Pricing hasn’t been announced, but Grabowski added that CD Projekt’s expansions “are traditionally cheaper than full-price games,” so it’ll probably be somewhere under $60.
Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty promises “a spy-thriller expansion” with “a new style of plot” that centers around the New United States of America, the nation that arose in the wake of the Collapse. A release date hasn’t been set, but it’s expected to be out sometime in 2023. CD Projekt is also currently working on a full Cyberpunk 2077 sequel.