Tags / cyberpunk

"cyberpunk"

16 BuzzVerdicts across Movies (6), TV Shows (2), PC Games (4), Mobile Games (1), Books (2), Board Games (1)

Blade Runner

4.5

1982 · Ridley Scott · 117 min · Sci-Fi / Noir

A commercial flop that rewrote the rules for an entire genre, Blade Runner earned its reputation the hard way. It looks like nothing that came before it, sounds like nothing that came before it, and asks questions about identity and empathy that science fiction is still chasing more than four decades later. The pacing will lose some people, and the romance has aged poorly by any standard. But the atmosphere, the philosophical weight, and Rutger Hauer's final moments on that rain-soaked rooftop have proven impossible to shake. This is one of those films that changes how you think about what science fiction can do.

Blade Runner 2049

4.5

2017 · Denis Villeneuve · 163 min · Sci-Fi / Drama

Blade Runner 2049 is that rare sequel that stands entirely on its own while deepening everything that came before it. Roger Deakins' cinematography alone justifies the price of admission, but the film offers far more than gorgeous images. It's a patient, brooding exploration of identity and memory that rewards viewers willing to sit with its deliberate pace. The 163-minute runtime will test some, and the film's emotional register runs cool by design. Those aren't flaws so much as features of a movie that knows exactly what it wants to be. Its growing reputation as one of the defining sci-fi films of the 2010s is well earned.

The Matrix

4.5

1999 · The Wachowskis · 136 min · Sci-Fi / Action

A film that blew apart what action cinema could look and feel like, then gave mainstream audiences a reason to think about the nature of reality, all wrapped in leather coats and slow-motion gunfire. Its visual innovations changed how movies looked for a decade afterward, and its central premise has only grown more relevant as technology has tightened its grip on daily life. Characters are thinner than the ideas surrounding them, and the love story never quite earns its place in the plot. None of that stops it from being one of the most rewatchable and culturally significant sci-fi films ever made.

RoboCop

4.3

1987 · Paul Verhoeven · 102 min · Sci-Fi / Action

RoboCop is the rare action film that got smarter with age. Paul Verhoeven buried a vicious corporate satire inside a sci-fi action movie and wrapped it in enough violence and spectacle to get it past audiences who might not have bought a ticket for social commentary alone. The fake commercials and news broadcasts create a world that feels more relevant now than it did in 1987, Peter Weller's physical performance gives the character a humanity that the suit should have made impossible, and the action sequences are staged with a precision that holds up decades later. The violence runs extreme and the female characters get shortchanged, but the film's vision of privatized everything and commodified humanity hits harder with every passing year.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners

4.3

2022 · 1 Season · Netflix · Animation / Action / Science Fiction / Drama

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners is a devastating ten-episode sprint through a world that chews people up and spits them out, animated by Studio Trigger with a visual energy that makes Night City feel more alive than the game ever managed. David Martinez's arc from desperate kid to doomed legend is a tragedy told at full speed, and the emotional gut-punch of the finale lands harder than most anime manage in three times the episode count. The compressed runtime leaves some character development feeling thin, and the middle episodes rush through material that could have used more room to breathe. But as a self-contained story about ambition, love, and the cost of trying to be somebody in a city that doesn't care, it's one of the best anime of its year.

Deus Ex

4.3

2000 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

Deus Ex remains one of the most ambitious games ever made, and the fact that it delivered on most of that ambition is what keeps players coming back more than two decades later. The freedom to approach every situation through combat, stealth, hacking, or conversation creates a game that truly plays differently on each run. The visuals and AI have aged poorly, the opening hours demand patience, and some skills are far more useful than others. But the level design, the branching narrative, and the sheer density of player choice set a standard that very few games have matched since. It earned its reputation as one of the greatest PC games of all time.

Cytus II

4.2

2018 · Rhythm

Cytus II is the rare mobile rhythm game that would be remarkable for its music alone but goes further by wrapping hundreds of songs in a cyberpunk narrative that rewards real investment. The touch controls are precise, the difficulty scaling is generous to newcomers while punishing for experts, and the sheer volume of musical genres represented means the soundtrack never grows stale. DLC pricing adds up quickly for completionists, and the story requires paid characters to fully experience. But the base game offers enough content to justify its entry price many times over, and what Rayark built here stands as one of the best rhythm games on any platform.

Shadowrun: Dragonfall - Director's Cut

4.2

2014 · RPG · PC / Steam

Shadowrun: Dragonfall is a masterclass in RPG writing wrapped in a solid tactical package. Its companions are some of the most memorable in the genre, the Berlin setting drips with atmosphere, and the central mystery pulls you through a story that rewards investment at every turn. Combat and inventory systems show their age, and the heavy reliance on text won't work for everyone. But for players who value narrative craft and character depth in their RPGs, Dragonfall remains one of the best examples of how to do it right.

Neuromancer

4.0

1984 · William Gibson · 271 pages · Science Fiction

Neuromancer is less a novel to be enjoyed than one to be experienced, and the experience is genuinely unlike anything written before or since. The dense prose and disorienting structure are real barriers, not marketing spin, but readers who push through find a world so fully imagined that it shaped the next forty years of science fiction. Whether it's the best introduction to cyberpunk is debatable. That it's the most important one is not.

Akira

4.0

1988 · Katsuhiro Otomo · 124 min · Science Fiction

Akira is a film built on contradictions. Its animation is peerless, but its story can leave you grasping for connections that aren't always there. It changed the trajectory of an entire medium, but watching it cold in the present day can be a disorienting experience. What holds it together is sheer conviction. Every frame radiates a confidence and ambition that most films, animated or otherwise, never approach. It's a flawed landmark, and there's nothing else quite like it.

Deus Ex: Human Revolution

4.0

2011 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Deus Ex: Human Revolution is a smartly designed immersive sim that gives you real choices in how you approach nearly every situation. Its cyberpunk world is atmospheric and convincing, the augmentation system creates meaningful character builds, and the hub areas reward curiosity at every turn. Boss fights remain a sore spot that clashes with the rest of the design philosophy, and the story wraps up with more of a shrug than a bang. But the 20-30 hours between those endpoints offer some of the most satisfying stealth and exploration on PC, and the Director's Cut addressed enough rough edges to make this a game that still holds up well over a decade later.

Specter Ops

3.8

2015 · 2-5 Players · ~60-120 min · Competitive

Specter Ops is one of the most polished hidden movement games available, translating the cat-and-mouse tension of stealth infiltration into a board game that's easy to learn and consistently exciting. The asymmetric agent-versus-hunter structure creates wildly different experiences depending on your role, and the variable powers keep games feeling fresh. Player count sensitivity is real, with the three-player configuration feeling unbalanced and the five-player mode adding unnecessary complexity. But at its best player count of four, Specter Ops delivers tension and thrills that few deduction games can match.

System Shock (Remake)

3.8

2023 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

System Shock's remake is a labor of love that brings a 1994 classic into the modern era while keeping its soul intact. Nightdive Studios nailed the atmosphere, modernized the visuals without losing the original's claustrophobic identity, and kept SHODAN as one of gaming's most compelling villains. The trade-off is that the game's maze-like levels and minimal guidance are still here, preserved alongside the good stuff. Players who want that old-school challenge of charting their own path through a hostile space station will find one of the most faithful and well-executed remakes in years. Everyone else should know what they're signing up for.

The Feedback Loop

3.5

2015 · Harmon Cooper · 288 pages · LitRPG / Cyberpunk

The Feedback Loop is a brisk, inventive mashup of noir detective fiction and LitRPG that moves fast and doesn't overstay its welcome. Harmon Cooper's knack for blending dark humor with cyberpunk atmosphere produces a reading experience that's consistently entertaining, even if the plot underneath doesn't break much new ground. It's the kind of book you finish in a sitting and remember more for its vibe than its story, which is both its charm and its ceiling.

The Peripheral

3.5

2022 · 1 Season · Amazon Prime Video · Science Fiction Thriller

The Peripheral is a stylish, ambitious adaptation of William Gibson's novel that delivers a compelling central performance from Chloe Grace Moretz and some inventive science fiction concepts. The show's dual-timeline structure creates an intriguing puzzle, but the dense mythology and rapid-fire worldbuilding leave many viewers struggling to keep up. Amazon's cancellation after one season means the story ends without resolution, making it a harder sell despite its significant strengths.

The Matrix Reloaded

3.0

2003 · The Wachowskis · 138 min · Sci-Fi / Action

The Matrix Reloaded delivered some of the most ambitious action sequences of its era while wrapping them in philosophical dialogue that split its audience down the middle. The highway chase holds up as one of the great set pieces in modern action cinema, and the expansion of the Matrix universe is more ambitious than most sequels attempt. But the pacing sags between those peaks, the CGI in the Smith fight has aged poorly, and the Architect scene trades clarity for density in a way that frustrated as many viewers as it fascinated. It is a sequel that swung for something bigger than the original and connected on spectacle while missing on story.