The novel’s genius lies in expanding petty crime. It follows a teen gang stealing not credchips but memories—selling rich people’s vacation experiences as illegal BDs. Their hideout is a flooded mall, with holographic sharks circling as guards. Small lore gems like this make Night City’s chaos feel lived-in. Even the food gets worldbuilding: ramen shops now use nano-broth that changes flavor based on your mood, a creepy metaphor for corpo control over basic human joy.
'Dream of Freedom' dives deep into Night City's underbelly, revealing layers the game barely scratched. It explores the aftermath of the 2023 corporate war through a new faction—displaced nomads turned cyber-anarchists, who hack not just systems but societal norms. Their tech is a fusion of scavenged Arasaka gear and tribal ingenuity, like drones disguised as vultures.
The story humanizes the AI rebellion, showing rogue Blackwall programs as refugees, not just threats. One chilling subplot involves a NetWatch agent realizing his targets are sentient. The lore expansion feels organic, tying into Johnny Silverhand's legacy but shifting focus to collective resilience over lone-wolf heroics. Environmental details—like ads for 'Soulkiller rehab clinics'—make the world eerily alive.
As a street medic main in the game, I geeked out over 'Dream of Freedom's' biotech twists. It shows how Trauma Team’s rejection of poorer clients led to underground 'patch parties'—raves where back-alley docs install bootleg cyberware. The book details new tech like 'pain editors,' chips that mute agony but also empathy. My favorite part was discovering that MaxTac officers secretly use similar tech to stay sane, blurring the line between protectors and monsters. The lore makes Night City feel even more tragically layered.
This novel turns Cyberpunk 2077's lore into a sprawling tapestry. It introduces the 'Neon Zen' cult, corpo kids who modify their brains to feel nothing—a sharp contrast to the game's excess. Their chrome is matte black, devoid of LEDs, and their hideouts are minimalist cubes in Japantown. The book also reveals that some cyberpsychos are actually victims of a Militech mind-control experiment gone wrong. The most brilliant touch? Relics aren’t just for dead legends—ordinary people upload their consciousness to protest against immortality being a luxury.
2025-07-02 13:42:37
18
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
CHAINS OF ETERNITY
E_nuel
10
812
Chains of Eternity – Synopsis
When the Spell descended, Kael was nothing but a street thief—hungry, nameless, and forgotten. But fate brands even the lowest, and he awakens in a world of endless night, where monsters roam the crimson wastes and survival is measured in breaths.
Cursed with a living shadow bound by chains, Kael discovers a terrible truth: every kill feeds the void within him, granting strength at the cost of his humanity. As he claws his way through horrors, he learns he is not alone. Other Chosen walk the darkness—rivals, allies, betrayers—each wielding powers as strange and dangerous as his own.
Together and apart, they will uncover the secret of the Spell, the price of survival, and the terrible destiny awaiting those who endure. But the longer Kael fights, the more he wonders: does he wield the shadow… or does the shadow wield him?
In a realm where hope is a myth and dawn is just a rumor, Kael must decide—become prey, or embrace the hunger and rise as something far worse.
Onerea is a place that you can find only in dreams. In that place, you can exchange your dream energy for things like food and accommodation. You can also enter the Mirrors, places in the outskirts of the city, where there are portal doors that will let you enter a dream within that Dreamworld. In a place like that, Annabelle Archer, a 25-year-old woman who, in real life, has serious heart disease, meets Dominik, who will be her guide through the mirrors, and maybe something else, but what could happen with a person that lives in a floating city within a dream?
---> if you are interested in my work, please check out my novel The Starving Vulture. Available on Amazon, $3.99 for the Ebook and $14.95 for the Paperback
https://www.amazon.com/Starving-Vulture-Miguel-Monta%C3%B1a/dp/1951150899<---------The Pacific Capital. A product of an altered world, the legacy of the dead Philippine nation.
A congested megacity holding 50 million people all huddled in what was once Metro Manila. It is the center for Pacific Maritime Trade, the world's largest Tax Haven and one of the few places in the world free from the Draconian but necessary environmental laws that saved the world since Cometfall.
Ruled by Megacorporations, Corrupt Politicians, Invested Nobility and Criminals. It is one of the world's most important agricultural and pharmaceutical centers.
H-6 is an Arbiter of the Court. As Judge Jury and Executioner, they maintain the essential Power Plant Canals and Massive weather controlled Dome Districts. Two elements that even the all powerful Megacorps need maximize their profits. Making Arbiter's Court the true rulers of the city. But even an all powerful Arbiter of the Court like H-6 knows, that Ambition and Greed will always find ways to ignore the rule of Law.
Solus Valentine is a Security Consultant, plying her trade to anyone in need. She is a gun for hire who has the street smarts for the city's underworld. Whether in the gilded halls or the most flooded streets, she's ready for your contract. But while completing a contract, she stumbles into a vast conspiracy that just might threaten the city's fragile power balance, if not the world. She just might need an Arbiter's help for this one. One who might be someone from her past.
Rachel has just started her junior year of high school and already wants a do-over. She decides to transfer to Pacific High, the rival school she started with. Rachel is looking for a high school experience unlike the 'typical' Lifetime-esque one, and she ends up finding much more than she anticipated. Pacific seems to be a school with endless possibilities, and unfortunately some of these are darker than anyone expect. Juggling her feelings for two love interests, Rachel must navigate life with a total creep with a disturbing obsession for her, a mysterious stalker, magic users and werewolves in a human world, alongside restless nights plagued by nightmares.
Our favorite MC Max, who has lost his father, his gaming career and yet, he still is a cheerful and strong character who loves his best friend Lucifer and his mom, the strong pillar of his life.
After being betrayed, he finds his joy and passion while playing the newest Hi-Tech game Virtual Dream. He believes that he could do well in what is his specialty. But his life is soon to take a turn for the better or the worse as he discovers shocking secrets, given a secret mission, faces his past demons and what not….How will he fare against these?. Find out as he takes on them one by one.
Lil Ward was given a task by an old man named Cain. His mission was to eradicate a hundred wicked people in the world. He realized that killing people was an unjust thing itself, but though he didn't want to kill, he could not control his power that was forcing him to commit the heinous crime. Lil became busy helping people, but he was also killing those bad people. One day, he met a girl named Kaila Breaks, with whom he didn't expect to fall in love. Lil hid everything about his power from Kaila, because he knew that she would leave him if she knew that he was a murderer. In contrast to Lil's expectations, Kaila also had a power from the wicked woman named Alicia. Kaila was also using her power to kill those bad people, because of the task that was given to her by Alicia. One day, the path of Lil and Kaila would meet. The hundredth people that they needed to kill was themselves in order to get rid from the curses of Cain and Alicia. The tale will tell you how Lil and Kaila were destined to fight against each other. Will they change their fate? Who will sacrifice oneself to make the other survive? Will they just let destiny decide everything? Which one is more important to them, love or freedom?
The status of 'Dream of Freedom' as canon in 'Cyberpunk 2077' is a topic of debate among fans. Officially, CD Projekt Red hasn't confirmed its inclusion in the main storyline, but its themes align seamlessly with the game's dystopian narrative. The story explores corporate oppression and personal rebellion—core elements of Night City's lore—through a side character's arc.
What makes it fascinating is how it mirrors Johnny Silverhand's ideology without directly referencing him. The protagonist's struggle against a rogue AI feels like a microcosm of the game's larger conflicts. Fans speculate it might be semi-canon, possibly cut content repurposed for a DLC. Its tone and aesthetic match the base game so well that many treat it as headcanon, especially since it delves into cyberpsychosis in a way the main plot barely touches.
I dove into the 'Cyberpunk 2077' book expecting it to flesh out Night City's grimy underbelly, and it didn’t disappoint. The lore expansions are subtle but impactful—little details about corporate wars, forgotten tech, and street legends that make the world feel lived-in. It’s not just a rehash of the game; there are entire sections on pre-collapse America and how the Pacific Rim became a corporate playground. The book digs into factions like the Moxes and Valentinos way deeper than the game ever could, giving them richer backstories and motivations.
What really hooked me were the vignettes about everyday life in Night City—how people adapt to chrome implants, the black markets for discarded tech, and even how food culture evolved amid scarcity. It’s those tiny, gritty details that make the cyberpunk genre sing. If you’re the type who pauses mid-game to read every shard, this book is like a treasure trove of 'what ifs' and 'why’s.' I finished it wishing CDPR had woven more of this into the main storyline.
Phantom Liberty is such a wild expansion to 'Cyberpunk 2077'—it’s like diving back into Night City but with a whole new layer of intrigue. The story revolves around Solomon Reed, an NUS sleeper agent, and his tangled web of loyalties, which perfectly complements the base game’s themes of betrayal and survival. The spy-thriller vibe is a fresh take, and the new district, Dogtown, feels like a lawless playground where every corner oozes danger.
What really ties it together is how your choices in Phantom Liberty ripple back into the main game. Meeting Reed early can shift how you approach certain missions, and the new ending—oh man, it’s a gut punch. CD Projekt Red didn’t just add content; they wove it into the fabric of V’s journey, making it feel like a natural extension rather than a detached side story.
Cyberpunk 2077's endings hit hard because they force you to confront the cost of survival in Night City. My first playthrough, I went with the 'Aldecaldos' path—figured rolling with Panam and the nomads was the closest thing to freedom in that dystopian hellscape. The ending where V rides off into the sunset with Judy or Panam feels bittersweet; you're alive, but the clock's still ticking on the Relic. Then there's the suicide option, which wrecked me—hearing Johnny's voice break during the credits calls was brutal. The 'Don't Fear the Reaper' solo raid on Arasaka is my favorite, though. Blazing through Mikoshi alone with Johnny at 100% sync? Pure catharsis, even if the ending montage implies V's days are numbered. CDPR nailed the existential weight of these choices—no clean wins, just shades of sacrifice.
What stuck with me was how each ending reframed Johnny's arc. In some, he learns humility; in others, he regresses. The 'secret' Temperance ending where you let him keep your body? Haunting stuff. The way the game weaves themes of legacy and identity through these outcomes makes replays mandatory. Still think about that voicemail from Misty saying my V became a Night City legend—chills every time.