Open up the game, load the save, start the romance with Panam, do a manual save after. Open up the save you just made in the editor, appearance tab, change your gender to Male, save the changes into your save file. Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series, and The Earthborn Trilogy, which is also on audiobook. Do the Panam quest until the Basilisk, save before getting in the panzer. Subscribe to my free weekly content round-up newsletter, God Rolls. Players are discovering the wide range of changes to Cyberpunk 2077 that CDPR snuck into the game, among them, bolstered romance paths that may not be huge updates, but players.
And I do think guys should get out of their comfort zone and play as the opposite gender from time to time (I know some do, but clearly not a ton).Īnyway, where’s that free Cyberpunk DLC that’s supposed to get here in the first half of the year?įollow me on Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. Obviously it would be nice if a game like this had more women players. I’m not “scolding” here, I just think it’s interesting. Judy’s side jobs will become available automatically. To successfully romance her, you have to play through her side jobs and make certain choices to win her favor. Judy is gay, so she is only romanceable if you play as female V. And it seems like barely a quarter of Cyberpunk players got to experience her, if this data indicates what I think it does. You’ll meet Judy very early in Cyberpunk 2077, and she’s a potential romantic partner for V. She’s real standout in a game full of loads of other problems. I think Male V is fine, but I will say I think Cherami Leigh’s voicework as Female V might be the best “first person” voicing I’ve ever seen in a video game, and she singlehandedly made the storyline work for me. I feel similarly about Male V versus Female V in Cyberpunk, though perhaps not quite to the Kassandra extreme.