Cyberpunk 2077 Isn’t Just a Game — It’s a Worldview
Cyberpunk 2077 presents itself as a rebellion fantasy: neon cities, corporate tyranny, body augmentation, and the promise of freedom through defiance. But underneath the aesthetic is something much older — and much more deliberate.
This video breaks down how Cyberpunk 2077 draws from Gnostic philosophy, Luciferian rebellion, transhumanism, and occult symbolism to shape the player’s moral imagination. The body is treated as disposable “meat,” authority is always corrupt, and salvation is found not through redemption, but through self-assertion and digital transcendence.
Johnny Silverhand functions as the archetypal rebel-saviour. Night City mirrors Babylon. Corporations take the role of the Demiurge. Tarot cards, divination, and “choice” are used not to offer freedom, but to reinforce nihilism. Every ending reinforces the same conclusion: there is no redemption — only rebellion, absorption, or oblivion.
This isn’t a critique of graphics or gameplay.
It’s an examination of what modern games teach us to believe.
🎥 Full analysis here:
https://youtu.be/M6JdHQn0XAg
If you’re interested in how entertainment quietly catechises its audience — especially in a post-Christian culture — this breakdown may change how you see cyberpunk as a genre.