In Cyberpunk 2077, V’s rise into the forbidden underworld was examined in a five-minute cutscene. 

In Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, David Martinez brings about five episodes to completely spoil badly. 

That moment gives Studio Trigger and founder Rafał Jaki breathing room to analyze Night City and the shattered dreams of its residents in an exhilarating 10-episode series.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners is a spinoff of CDPR’s Cyberpunk 2077, indicating it is positioned in the same understanding as the acclaimed tabletop RPG designed by Mike Pondsmith. 

Instead, Edgerunners obeys David Martinez, an academically shining scholar whose aptitudes can’t be sustained by the earnings of his single mother.

When David has to start guarding for himself, Edgerunners carries the time to examine how Night City can be disturbing in ways that go beyond psychotic cybernetically improved street gangs.

As David discovers himself slowly flooding in debt, kicked out of the prestigious university he can no longer afford, and chased by debt-collectors.

Night City’s hyper-capitalism evolves the early sinner in Edgerunners, indicating that not even passing cars and relaxed outfits are a cure-all for deprivation.  

All this is to speak Edgerunners might conclude up being one of the year’s dozer hits because of the softened hype directing to the premiere.  

aki, who performed as a company developer on Cyberpunk 2077 and writer of The Witcher Ronin manga, unmoored from the central storyline of CDPR’s videotape game decided to explore the wider elements of Night City.