It's been a few weeks since Cyberpunk 2077 was released, and the only thing we can say is that it has been a full-on emotional rollercoaster. This game has certainly given the gaming community something to talk about, from being placed on a pedestal to thousands asking for refunds to been pulled out of major digital stores.

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Despite all, Cyberpunk is still a fantastic open-world RPG many have enjoyed, thanks to its dark world and deep story. However, all games must come to an end; after the main story is over, the side-missions completed, and all the secrets have been discovered, what is there to do next? You could certainly play the game all over again and chose a different path, or you could just try another open-world game that shares at least one similarity with Cyberpunk 2077.

10 The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

The witcher fighting a monster

Believe it or no, Cyberpunk 2077 isn't the first game from the Polish developer CD Projekt Red. Before the studio dwelled in Night City, they worked on The Witcher video games. With The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt being the most popular entry in the series, even receiving many nominations for game of the year.

Wild Hunt takes players to a magical world, filled with monsters to kill, locations to explore, characters to meet, and secrets to discover. Players will be completing contracts as Geralt of Rivia, a very different protagonist than Cyberpunk's V,  and make numerous decisions along the way that will affect how the story unfolds and the fate of some characters.

9 Red Dead Redemption II

Arthur and John walking in front of a house

From the same studio that created Grand Theft Auto, Red Dead Redemption II is the long-awaited prequel to 2010's Red Dead Redemption. Because this is a prequel, gamers won't be playing as John Marston but as Arthur Morgan, an outlaw, and member of The Van der Linde gang.

Just like Cyberpunk, RDR2 was created with massive attention to detail and had a story that grabs your attention from the game's first few seconds. In this game, you'll get to explore the last days of the wild west and, as the story progresses, help Arthur decide between his moral code and the loyalty he feels for the gang.

8 Fallout 4

The Sole Survivor looking at the wasteland

In Cyberpunk, your choices matter, and CD Projekt Red made sure you'll have a wide array of options to choose from. Your character's gender, the lifepaths it had, or the weapons you use affect your playthrough in one way or the other.

If you're looking for another game that gives you this illusion of free will, look no further than Bethesda's Fallout 4. Released in 2015, this game makes you explore the wasteland as The Sole Survivor, a character looking for the son someone took away from them. Along the way, you'll meet a wide array of characters you can interact with, help, or kill, and even romance. You'll also get the chance to join various factions that fight each other in The Commonwealth.

7 GTA V

Three main characters from GTA V

GTA V is a prime example of how a good game can be ageless when it's got solid gameplay and a good story. Originally released back in 2013 for the PS3 and Xbox 360, GTA V survived two consoles generations and, with no plans for a GTA VI in the near future, looks like it will be a top seller for the next-gen consoles as well.

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In this game, you'll get to play as three main protagonists from which you can switch during and outside missions. The single-player story centers on a series of heists you'll have to plan and execute, but there are other side missions as well. So, if you liked free-roaming Cyberpunk's Night City, take a look at the fictional city of Los Santos, a colossal map based in Los Angeles and filled with many secrets and easter eggs.

6 Watch Dogs: Legion

Watch Dogs: Legion promotional pic

Cyberpunk 2077 unfolds in a world where the greed for megacorporations have done more harm than good. If you liked that aspect of the story, Ubisoft's Watch Dogs: Legion might be up your alley.

This game takes place in Landaan, a futuristic and dystopic version of London where an all-seeing surveillance state controls the citizens, mercenaries control the streets, and you're the only hope for freeing the city from these authoritarian populists. A unique addition to this game is that you can play as almost anyone you meet in the game, almost being the keyword here because, even if it is set in a parallel-universe London, you can't play as the queen.

5 Assassin's Creed: Valhalla

Female Eivor in the battlefield with an axe

Released just a month before Cyberpunk, Assassin's Creed: Valhalla was another super hyped game for the holidays. Thankfully, this one had fewer bugs at release. This game is the 22 release in the Assassin's Creed games and a successor to Assassin's Creed Odyssey.

Assassins Creed: Valhalla takes fans of the franchise to an era where Vikings roamed the world. This time, players control Eivor, a Viking raider, during the Viking invasion of Britain. Just like in Cyberpunk, you'll get to customized the main character's hair, clothing, armor, and tattoos.

4 The Deus Ex Series

Character from Deus Ex Mankind Divided

It's easy to compare The Deus Ex Series with Cyberpunk 2077; after all, they all have the cyberpunky genre and dystopian elements to link them together. While the games share specific themes and the atmosphere is similar, they play totally different. Still, Fans of Cyberpunk 2077 might feel at home in the Deus Ex titles.

RELATED: Cyberpunk 2077: 5 Reasons Why It's The Best In The Genre (& 5 Why It's Deus Ex) 

This series unfolds in a world where present-day conspiracy theories are real, like Majestic 12 or the Illuminati. While each game has its own story, all of them explore how elite groups can control and even manipulate society. Being a game in the cyberpunk genre, Deus Ex titles feature human augmentations, high tech, AI, and transgenics. However, is its last title, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided that gave fans a near-open world where you can complete side quests or explore the map.

3 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Skyrim promotional pic

You might say whatever you want about Cyberpunk, but when it comes to character customization, the game truly lets gamers play with a lot of options; hey, you can even adjust your junk size!

If that level of customization is something you enjoy, take a look at The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. This Bethesda title from 2011 let players choose from 10 different races, each with their abilities and powers, similar to Cyberpunk's life paths. Once the race is settled, players can change the character's gender, skin tone, weight, facial structure, hair, etc.

2 Horizon Zero Dawn

Aloy fighting a machine in Horizon Zero Dawn

While in Cyberpunk, humans use high tech to enhance some features, in Horizon Zero Dawn, technology was responsible for humankind's almost extinction.

This game takes place in a post-apocalyptic world where people live in a tribal lifestyle and co-exist with robots that roam freely on the map. In this Playstation exclusive, you play as Aloy, an outcast who must use her abilities and an augmented reality device to explore the earth. During this adventure, she'll fight some machines, discover her past and stop the corruption that's taken over the machines and the land.

1 Cloudpunk

Car in cloudpunk´s city

This is one of those games you totally missed this year. In Cloudpunk, you play as Rania; she just left the countryside's security to work in the big city of Nivalis. There Rania is a delivery driver for the not-so-legal company Cloudpunk. As such, she must drive her flying car through the city and collect or deliver passengers and packages, no questions asked.

Along the way, she'll meet different characters, like humans, androids, or Artificial Intelligence, and will make choices that, in one way or the other, influence what happens in the story. In this game, you can explore Nivalis to collect optional story items to unlock additional side quests and stories.

Next: In-Game vs Reality: What Cyberpunk 2077 Characters Look Like In Real Life