Now that Cyberpunk 2077 is finally worth playing with minimal issues, we’re getting reports that CDPR isn’t solely to blame for the game’s issues. A whistleblower from Quantic Lab, a third-party QA company that worked on Cyberpunk 2077, just came forward with a 72-page document sent via Upper Echelon Gamers that had very serious allegations against the company, such as:
Lying about the team size working on Cyberpunk 2077 to keep the contract Assigning juniors with minimal QA experience to work on Cyberpunk 2077 despite claiming that it will assign senior staff Filing thousands of pointless bug reports to meet a daily quota of reported bugs, bogging down the development process
So, what does this all mean? Should we blame the QA testers Cyberpunk 2077? Can we give CD Projekt RED a pass? The answer is no to both questions. At the end of the day, it falls on CDPR to do its own diligence. The Polish studio spent years and hundreds of millions of dollars to make Cyberpunk 2077. It simply just cannot afford to hand over the monumental task for debugging and testing a game to a company without making sure that it can take an enormous project. Video games are a lucrative but hectic business. For every GTA V that rakes in billions is a Cyberpunk 2077 that probably burned a hole in CDPR’s wallets with all the refunds and the positive PR the company had to do. Ultimately, we are glad that Cyberpunk 2077 put predatory companies on blast. For example, reports suggest that Bethesda delayed Starfield to avoid becoming the second coming of Cyberpunk 2077. If we can see more of the same because Cyberpunk 2077 failed, we’re happy. As they say, Cyberpunk 2077 walked so that the rest of the video game industry can run.