• Don't ignore the Witcher 4's warning signs

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Sat Apr 16 15:00:03 2022
    Don't ignore the Witcher 4's warning signs

    Date:
    Sat, 16 Apr 2022 13:40:00 +0000

    Description:
    The Witcher 4's reveal is exciting, but this isn't 2015 and CD Projekt has to prove it's changed.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    If youd asked me if I wanted The Witcher 4 back at the launch of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, the answer would have been an emphatic yes. Naturally, there'd be caveats: the story would have to be right, there'd have to be a good
    reason to return to that world, but the opportunity to return to that rich, monster-filled kingdom would be too tempting to ignore.

    That was back in 2015, though.

    The recent Witcher 4 teaser, an image of a lynx medallion resting in pure white snow, doesnt tell us much. The accompanying announcement, stating the development team has dropped its in-house engine for Epics Unreal Engine 5 , told us little more. (Image credit: CD Projekt Red)

    It's an exciting teaser for fans, of course; the lynx's head medallion shows CD Projekt Red is departing from the lore of the books to strike its own path
    there is no mention of a School of the Lynx in Andrzej Sapkowskis novels ,
    so this must be a new Witcher school entirely. CD Projekt lost its luster

    However, since The Witcher 3s launch, CD Projekt Red has released another massive game, one not nearly so well received. While critic scores for Cyberpunk 2077 pre-launch were high, the overwhelming reaction post-release has been... quite negative. The RPG launched in a poor state, with
    significant bugs ruining players experience; it stung all the more because it fell short of the promise of its early demos and had a general lifelessness
    to its world. It was a terrible letdown from such a talented developer. Even those digging for diamonds in the rough should admit that, at its best, Cyberpunk 2077 isn't a patch on The Witcher 3, frequently dropping the ball
    in its storytelling and falling into plenty of lazy tropes and stereotypes. (Image credit: CD Projekt Red)

    Part of this may be due to a simple fact: The CD Projekt Red that made The Witcher 3 is not the one that made Cyberpunk 2077. Quest Designer Nikolas Kolm, a massive role in The Witcher 3's success, moved from the studio to
    work at Ubisoft on the highly-praised Assassin's Creed Odyssey. Nor was Kolm the only key staff member to do so.

    With such an exodus of talent, it's fair to say the team that created Cyberpunk 2077 is not the one that delivered the lauded 2015 fantasy RPG. For all the dizzying ambition and money a studio can throw at a project, people make games, and their success results from collaboration. Can The Witcher 4 possibly live up to its predecessor when those developers are gone? Make and break

    Theres also the question of should we want the Witcher 4? Developers on Cyberpunk 2077 have spoken about the dreadful conditions they worked under to make the game. Releasing a bad game is one thing, but a studio that puts its staff through such a stressful, debilitating development shouldnt be easily forgiven. Any time something worth playing comes out of these conditions its
    a cursed miracle that only helps hide how precarious and damaging development crunch time is. (Image credit: CD Projekt Red)

    All of this is to say that, while a new installment in a beloved series is exciting in the pure abstract, it cannot be divorced from how CD Projekt made it. Its hard to be excited for The Witcher 4 when the team that made The Witcher 3 has moved on, when Cyberpunk was such a disaster, and when the studio failed to safeguard the good health of its employees.

    There's fertile ground to grow another stellar RPG.

    I could wax on about potential features and storylines there's fertile
    ground to grow another stellar RPG: I'd love to see Ciri in the leading role and what stories stem from her narrative. How does she make a living as a witcher without the superhuman mutagens that made Geralt the killing machine he was? Does she still have access to the power that defined her life for so long? How would Ciri deal with living in a patriarchal world, a reality
    Geralt largely avoided? (Image credit: CD Projekt RED)

    But, that excitement doesnt trump the fact the studio's last release failed
    to deliver on its promise, and it didnt look after the people making it. People will speculate wildly about what they want from a new Witcher game,
    but the possibility and not the reality may blind them. The questions to be asked about The Witcher 4 are not about its plot or new features. They should be about whether CD Projekt Red has done anything to address its working conditions? How can we trust the marketing of this next release when
    Cyberpunk 2077s painted such a different picture from the reality of the
    final game?

    The Witcher 4 warrants skepticism and critique until CD Projekt Red shows the world things have changed for the better. No promise of a sequel-of-your-dreams should change that.



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/dont-ignore-the-witcher-4s-warning-signs/


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