Cyberpunk 2077 is hard to follow because the obvious labels are too broad. "Open world", "sci-fi", and "RPG" point in different directions once you are choosing what to install next.
If you want games like Cyberpunk 2077 for choices and builds, start with Deus Ex: Mankind Divided. It is smaller, older, and less flashy, but it puts stealth, hacking, augment routes, and mission approach closer to the center.
If you mostly miss long questlines and character consequence, pick The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. If you miss looting, perks, crafting, and tinkering with a character sheet for hours, pick Fallout 4. The wrong move is buying the biggest sci-fi map and expecting Cyberpunk's dense mission feel to appear on its own.
Choice-heavy missions
Quest consequence
Loot, perks, and build tinkering
Sci-fi exploration scale
Older cyberpunk roots
Choose by the Cyberpunk habit you miss, not by the broad sci-fi RPG label.
The shared itch
Cyberpunk works when Night City gives your build a reason to exist. A stealthy netrunner, blunt-force solo, silenced pistol build, or smooth-talking fixer path changes how you read a job before the shooting starts.
That is the standard here. The best follow-up should give you decisions before combat, not just a big map after combat. Some picks trade neon for better quest writing. Some trade density for sandbox freedom. Some are simply older, sharper versions of the cyberpunk fantasy.
| If you miss... | Start with | What you give up |
|---|---|---|
| Mission routes, stealth, hacking, and augment builds | Deus Ex: Mankind Divided | Night City's scale and driving |
| Heavy quest consequence and companion writing | The Witcher 3 | Guns, cyberware, and sci-fi cities |
| Perks, loot, crafting, and wasteland tinkering | Fallout 4 | Cyberpunk mood and cinematic jobs |
| Space scale and faction wandering | Starfield | Dense city streets and authored pressure |
| Classic cyberpunk immersive-sim roots | Deus Ex: Human Revolution | Modern combat feel and open-world sprawl |
Games like Cyberpunk 2077 when choices matter most
Choose this lane if you remember Cyberpunk less as a driving game and more as a chain of jobs: scan the room, find the side door, hack the camera, talk your way through, or decide the build is loud enough to skip subtlety.

Deus Ex: Mankind Divided
Recommendation
- Best for
- Cyberpunk players who want stealth, hacking, conversation routes, and augment builds to decide how missions play.
- Why it fits
- Mankind Divided makes each mission space feel like a problem with several answers. Your build changes how you enter, who sees you, what systems you bend, and how much violence you need.
- Skip if
- You need a huge open world, cars, radio stations, or the scale and spectacle of Night City.
Deus Ex: Mankind Divided should be the first click for this guide's core reader. It will look smaller next to Cyberpunk, but that smaller shape is the point: fewer empty meters, more attention on routes, vents, cameras, augments, and consequences inside a mission.
Deus Ex: Human Revolution - Director's Cut
Recommendation
- Best for
- Players who want the older cyberpunk RPG lineage behind Cyberpunk's hacking, corporate paranoia, and body-mod fantasy.
- Why it fits
- Human Revolution is more dated than Mankind Divided, but it still understands the fantasy of becoming a specialized tool in a hostile corporate world.
- Skip if
- Old UI, boss-fight design, or slower stealth would bother you more than the cyberpunk mood helps.
Deus Ex: Human Revolution is the better second pick if the neon, body-mod, and corporate-conspiracy side of Cyberpunk mattered. Treat it as a roots pick, not as a modern open-world replacement.
When you want quest consequence more than cyberpunk mood
Choose this lane if the best parts of Cyberpunk were the long character arcs, hard endings, romance decisions, and jobs that made you sit with a choice after the marker disappeared. The next game does not need neon if it gives decisions weight.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
Recommendation
- Best for
- Players who miss Cyberpunk's authored questlines, character stakes, romance arcs, and ugly choices.
- Why it fits
- The Witcher 3 is fantasy instead of sci-fi, but it is close in the way side quests become character stories instead of checklist filler.
- Skip if
- You specifically want guns, first-person play, cyberware, hacking, or city density.
The Witcher 3 is the best non-cyberpunk answer because it shares the studio's taste for messy choices and character-driven side stories. Pick it when you miss Judy, Panam, River, Kerry, and the weight of an ending more than you miss mantis blades.
When you want loot, builds, and open-world tinkering
Choose this lane if your Cyberpunk save became a build lab. Maybe you kept respecing perks, chasing iconic weapons, testing mods, and clearing map icons because the character sheet kept giving you a new excuse.

Fallout 4
Recommendation
- Best for
- Players who want perks, weapons, looting, settlements, crafting, and open-world wandering with a build always in progress.
- Why it fits
- Fallout 4 is less stylish and less cinematic than Cyberpunk, but it is very good at giving every ruin and scrap pile a build reason.
- Skip if
- You need sharp dialogue choices, dense city mood, or a main story that feels as directed as Cyberpunk's best arcs.
Fallout 4 is not the most elegant match, but it is honest about what it offers. You roam, loot, mod, build, and tune a character until the wasteland becomes a long-running project.
Starfield
Recommendation
- Best for
- Players who want sci-fi faction quests, ship-to-planet wandering, and a large Bethesda sandbox.
- Why it fits
- Starfield keeps the RPG build and exploration habit, then spreads it across planets, ships, factions, and outposts.
- Skip if
- You want Night City's density, street-level attitude, or tightly staged missions more than sci-fi scale.
Starfield is the pick for scale, not density. It makes more sense if you want a huge sci-fi RPG to live inside for a while than if you want another dangerous city pressing in from every side.
The wrong default: biggest sci-fi map first
This is where many Cyberpunk recommendations go soft. A bigger world does not automatically replace Night City. The more important question is whether you want authored routes, stronger writing, build tinkering, or sheer exploration.
If you want games like Cyberpunk 2077 because you liked slipping through jobs with a specialized build, buy Deus Ex first. If you want more RPG consequence, buy The Witcher 3 first. If you want a giant sci-fi sandbox, then Starfield is fair, but do not make it the default just because it is the largest sci-fi RPG on the list.
FAQ
What is the closest game to Cyberpunk 2077 for choices and builds?
Deus Ex: Mankind Divided is the closest pick for mission choices, stealth, hacking, and build routes. It is smaller than Cyberpunk 2077, but it gives your character choices more room inside each mission.
What should I play if I want Cyberpunk's story more than its combat?
Play The Witcher 3 if you want long quests, character arcs, and decisions that linger. It loses the cyberpunk mood, but it keeps the authored RPG strength.
Is Starfield a good game after Cyberpunk 2077?
Starfield is good after Cyberpunk if you want space exploration, factions, outposts, and a broad Bethesda sandbox. It is not the best first pick if you want dense city streets, stylish combat, or mission-route choice.
Should I play Deus Ex: Human Revolution or Mankind Divided first?
Start with Deus Ex: Mankind Divided if you want the smoother next game. Choose Human Revolution first if you care more about the older cyberpunk storyline and can tolerate more dated systems.
- Choose Deus Ex: Mankind Divided if you want stealth, hacking, augment builds, and mission-route choice.
- Choose The Witcher 3 if you want quest consequence, companions, and authored RPG storytelling.
- Choose Fallout 4 if you want loot, perks, crafting, settlements, and open-world tinkering.
- Choose Starfield if you want sci-fi scale, faction wandering, and a huge Bethesda sandbox.
- Choose Deus Ex: Human Revolution if you want the older cyberpunk immersive-sim roots.
Pick the game by the Cyberpunk habit you want back, not by the broad sci-fi RPG label.
If you are still undecided, start with Deus Ex: Mankind Divided. It gives up Cyberpunk's city scale, but it keeps the most important thing for this guide: a build that changes how you solve the job in front of you.
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Deus Ex: Mankind Divided
You play as Adam Jensen, an experienced covert operative operating in a world that despises his kind: augmented humans. Choose from an arsenal of state-of-the-art weapons and augmentations to build your playstyle, and decide who you'll trust, to unravel a vast worldwide conspiracy.


The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
You are Geralt of Rivia, mercenary monster slayer. Before you stands a war-torn, monster-infested continent you can explore at will. Your current contract? Tracking down Ciri — the Child of Prophecy, a living weapon that can alter the shape of the world.


Fallout 4
From Bethesda Game Studios, the award-winning creators of Starfield and The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, comes Fallout 4. A landmark in open-world RPG design and winner of over 200 ‘Best Of’ honors, including the DICE and BAFTA Game of the Year.


Starfield
Starfield is the first new universe in 25 years from Bethesda Game Studios, the award-winning creators of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and Fallout 4.


Deus Ex: Human Revolution - Director's Cut
You play Adam Jensen, an ex-SWAT specialist who's been handpicked to oversee the defensive needs of one of America's most experimental biotechnology firms. Your job is to safeguard company secrets, but when a black ops team breaks in and kills the very scientists you were hired to protect, everything you thought you knew about your job...
