You Know that Cyberpunk 2077 is good now and it is becoming very amazing game?
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=>Check the points below to see the Cyberpunk 2077 game in details are:-
- The much-maligned game, which was notoriously bug-ridden at launch, has had a renaissance since it received an overhaul and its first and only story expansion in September.
- The act of dashing through the gorgeous and hyper-violent streets of Night City has grown to be a thrilling and relatively glitch-free experience.
- But the thing I’ve come to enjoy most about Cyberpunk lately is being able to take my knife-wielding cyber-ninja anyplace
- I like, thanks to a newish feature that hasn’t gotten the love it deserves cross progression.
- Cross progression lets you carry your, well, progress from one platform to another with your character’s inventory and journey history intact.
- If you play the same title on some combination of Nintendo Switch, PC, Steam Deck, Xbox, and PlayStation, cross-saving allows you to continue right from where you last left off, no matter which device you last played on.
- It shows up mostly in multiplayer games like Fortnite or Destiny 2 that let you access your same character and account on multiple platforms provided you own the game or have access to it through a subscription on each of those platforms.
- It’s less common in single-player games.
- Cyberpunk’s developer, CD Projekt Red, added the feature in an update last year.
- It’s also available for The Witcher 3.
- Ubisoft has cross progression as part of its Connect service that lets you sync progress in games like Assassin’s Creed Valhalla across PC and consoles.
- Larian Studios added cross progression to Divinity Original Sin 2 in 2021 and says it will soon implement the feature in its new, very popular Baldur’s Gate 3.
- The concept is different from cross-play, which lets you interact with users on different platforms in multiplayer games, so XBox users can play Fortnite or Call of Duty with friends who are on a PlayStation.
- Both features are present in a number of popular modern games, but how they manifest varies widely depending on the platform and game developer.
- Cross progression is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed.
- Nearly all games from cozy indies to AAA blockbusters would benefit from the convenience the feature affords.
- Proper cross progression in gaming is in its primordial stage: messy, weird, and imperfect but clearly still evolving.
- David Cole, CEO of the technology analyst firm DFC, says that adding cross-saving to a game is something not many developers can focus on given all the must-have features that need to be built into a title for release.
- Plus, Cole says, consumer demand for it is not huge yet.
- He compares the evolution of cross progression to the evolution of television, which began with just a few channels and shows that aired in specific time slots.
- Now you’re able to watch anything you want anytime, basically.
- And it’s just become a natural part of the process there.
- And I think we’re headed toward that.
- It’s easy to sync your progress with traditional forms of media.
- If you’re watching a movie and decide to finish watching it somewhere else, you can easily open the video on another device and pick up where you left off.
- Kindle has Whispersync, which is like cross-save for books.
- You can read on a Kindle for 100 pages, then open the Kindle app on your phone or even the Audible app and it jumps to the place in your book where you left off.
- Game progress is a lot harder to re-create if you need to, either in story-heavy games that track your choices or multiplayer games that reward your playtime with loot and cosmetic customizations.
- Everybody’s playthroughs, character stats, and world states are going to be a little different, meaning there’s a lot more data that needs to be uploaded and downloaded.
- Still, if you want to switch platforms or just switch rooms, without the ability to transfer saves, you’d have to give up all your recent progress and start over.
- If cross progression were adopted more widely across the industry, the feature could do for gaming what wireless controllers did and literally untether you from your main console.
- Of course, losing that stickiness which keeps people loyal to one ecosystem is what makes gaming companies nervous.
- Microsoft and Sony have spent the past few years gobbling up big game companies so they can release popular titles exclusively on their own platforms.
- Nintendo is in a league of its own and keeps all of its homegrown titles exclusively on its devices.
- But with the proliferation of cloud gaming and subscription services like XBox Game Pass, that ability to carry your progress within a game to any system is becoming more common.
- People are collecting more gaming hardware too.
- The trend now is people have multiple platforms Cole says.
- A lot of people own a Nintendo and then either a PlayStation or Xbox and then a PC and a mobile device.
- They’ll have four different platforms, where they can hop back and forth.
- Even if the console giants don’t want to play nice, developers are finding workarounds to make their games truly cross-platform.
- Cloud services from developers like Ubisoft and CD Projekt Red let users make online accounts that keep game data synced and convert it to work on other platforms.
- Yes, that means you’ll have to set up more user accounts for more services, which is annoying.
- But being able to play a game like Assassin’s Creed on any platform you like and then switch on a whim feels freeing.
- I have Cyberpunk 2077 on both the PlayStation and the Steam Deck.