The next installment in The Witcher series, which many fans have been eagerly awaiting news about for some time is finally getting an important word from CD Projekt RED and it is set to be called (as a codename) -Witcher 4: Polaris.
In a recent video message from CD Projekt RED CFO Piotr Nielubowicz, the Polaris team has made “significant headway”, and approached the end of pre-production with the production stage commencing shortly.
As stated during a recent financial call by CEO Michał Nowakowski (via IGN), the Polaris team has increased slightly over that time, swelling from 407 members to 410 between April and July.
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Numbers-wise, 410 new devs might not seem like the largest increase in staff ever (bearing in mind that CD Projekt RED employs around 639 people) – but this uptick corresponds with a massive chunk of its workforce being invested directly into Cyberpunk.
Nowakowski also gave assurance to investors that the team is “scaling” and beginning production soon as well.
Though The Witcher 4 was technically announced in 2023, things don’t seem to be happening at a very steady clip over there – it’s looking less and less likely that the game will hit its initial suspected release window of sometime around 2025.
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These comments add weight to CD Projekt RED’s co-CEO Adam Badowski’s recent prediction in January that Polaris would enter production during 2018, hinting at a long way off yet for the game making its debut.
Thronebreaker is not part of the customary Witcher series, but the mainline games in that franchise – CD Projekt RED’s bread-and-butter for most of its development history (before Cyberpunk 2077) have been on hold since The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt and follow-up expansion Blood & Wine wrapped up nearly a decade ago.
The spin-offs the company has used to try and keep their fanbase tied them over in between main game releases have, however, seen mixed results. Gwent: The Standalone Card Game was launched in 2018 and initially burned brightly with high hopes for esports but its flame sputtered out, leading to the shuttering of servers amid layoffs in 2023.
Likewise, while Thronebreaker had been a big critical success, its sales fell below company expectations.
Worse yet, CD Projekt RED underwent a major financial loss in early 2023 that resulted in lay-offs of around one hundred employees – including some who had worked on Gwent and another Witcher spin-off game under the codename Project Sirius.
Still, project lead Project Sirius is there in some way shape, or form but with reduced scope to stay within budget.
With everything on the line, it seems as though CD Projekt RED is playing its cards close to its chest with Polaris and wants nothing more than to release a game that measures up against Witcher 3 when stacked alongside both of their previous games.
Considering it is unlikely we will even get our hands on the game within the next few years, utmost patience shall be required as CD Projekt Red labors to do justice for its successor in The Witcher universe.
In the meantime, CD Projekt RED will have to hope little updates like these can hold players over while they continue working on developing Polaris until it is realized in a playable form.
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