All of E3's press conferences have run their course, and the show is now open for journalists and the public to explore the various booths and get some hands-on experience with many of the biggest upcoming games.
While Rockstar didn't show anything off, Grand Theft Auto did become tangentially related when one of the new games was (derogatively) compared to it.
CD Projekt Red, the Polish developer who blessed the world with The Witcher RPG series is working on a new IP. Based on the legendary tabletop RPG Cyberpunk 2020, a new open-world first-person RPG named Cyberpunk 2077 is coming to PC and consoles.
While the game was first announced years ago and later got a pretty nondescript trailer, we finally saw some in-engine footage and journalists on the show floor experienced actual gameplay.
Reactions to the trailer were almost universally positive among the gaming press and fans. Thing is, someone whose name carries a lot of weight in the cyberpunk community was less than impressed. William Gibson, author of Neuromancer among a score of other novels and considered the father of cyberpunk as a genre called the trailer generic.
Cyberpunk 2077 is an open-world game that doesn't pull punches when it comes to potentially controversial themes like violence, crime, substance abuse and sex.
In this sense, the Grand Theft Auto comparison is apt and in an industry where GTA happens to be a mainstream titan with its latest installment moving over 95 million copies, cementing it as one of the most mainstream representatives of these themes, it is also easy to see why being like GTA might seem like being generic.
Cyberpunk 2077's trailer also abandoned one of the key visual characteristics of cyberpunk media, namely that it was bright and sunny instead of a dreary, rainy night scene. As iconic as neo-noir depictions are in cyberpunk works, it's not like a universal rule of the genre is that the sun was shot in a back alley by a crime-boss and thus it must always be night-time.
This sunny, big-city vibe going on in the trailer is admittedly visually similar to several of GTA 5's trailers, showing off a sunny Los Santos juxtaposed on scenes of explosions and various acts of violence enacted by Trevor, Franklin and Michael.