Cyberpunk 2077 developer CD Projekt Red is changing its bonus structure so that long-toiling staff will get their full performance bonuses regardless of the game’s critical reception, according to Bloomberg.

Bonuses wont be tied to the games critical reception
Image: CD Projekt Red
Cyberpunk 2077, CD Projekt Reds latest game,has been in development for nearly a decade. It was first announced in May 2012, and its had a rocky development cycle, with numerous delays and, in the final stretch of development, a required six-day workweek. But despite the long development, the game didnt review quite as well as CDPR wanted, meaning developers who had been toiling for years could have been on the brink of losing performance bonuses that were tied to review scores.
The studios developers wont have to worry about review scores anymore, though: CDPR will now pay full performance bonuses regardless of the critical reception of the game, according to Bloomberg.
We underestimated the lengths and complexity involved to make this a reality
We initially had a bonus system that was focused on the games ratings and the release date, but after consideration, we believe that measure is simply not fair under the circumstances, Adam Badowski, studio head and creative director for Cyberpunk 2077, said in an email to staff obtained by Bloomberg. We underestimated the lengths and complexity involved to make this a reality, and still you did everything you could to deliver an ambitious, special game.
Cyberpunk 2077 received favorable reviews this week it currently has a Metacritic score of 90 out of 100, which typically indicates that a game is very good. By contrast, some of the top games of this year edge it out with Metacritic scores in the low 90s.
But reviewers reportedly werent given review code for the console versions of the game, and there are now numerous reports of bugs and issues when playing Cyberpunk 2077 on older consoles. Given the current problems players are now finding, Cyberpunk 2077s Metacritic score could easily fall below 90 as more publications post reviews. If it falls below that score, developers wouldnt have received their bonuses under the previous system, according to Bloomberg.
NEWS: CD Projekt executives took responsibility for Cyberpunk’s buggy launch in an email to staff today, saying this year’s performance bonuses will no longer be tied to review scores, given the circumstances. Before, the threshold was 90+ on Metacritic https://t.co/poW86s3xaf
Jason Schreier (@jasonschreier) December 12, 2020
CDPR leaders would hand out tokens every month to staffers who went above and beyond, and those tokens were supposed to be transferrable into bonuses if the game met certain criteria, like critical acclaim and a timely release, according to the report. Now, though, it sounds as if all staffers will get their performance bonuses no matter where the review score lands.
CDPR didnt immediately reply to a request for comment.
Cyberpunk 2077 has been a big retail success, despite the reviews and buggy release. It sold more than 8 million preorders, according to CDPR, completely making back its development and marketing budget on day one. It also broke Steams concurrent player record for a single-player PC game, with more than one million concurrent players on Thursday.