Over 85 million The Witcher games sold
01/19/26 - CD Projekt Red has sold more than 85 million games of its The Witcher series worldwide to date. This is confirmed by CEO Michal Nowakowski on X. The sales figures of the three games at a glance:
- The Witcher (PC): 10 million copies
- The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings (Xbox 360, PC): 15 million copies
- The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (PS5, Xbox Series, PS4, Xbox One, Switch, PC): 60 million copies
I'd be really curious to see what the price breakdown is for The Witcher 3 sales. The base game floats between $20 to $5 whenever it's on sale for at least 5 or 6 years now. I still need to check it out. One of these days. The closest I've come to playing it was that Witcher DLC for monster Hunter world.
Did anyone try playing Wolfenstein 2 in stealth mode? Trying to take guards out Splinter Cell style? Is it even possible to do a whole level without being spotted?
I've been making some good progress in 'The Lair of the Clockwork God'. The humour is pretty good, as is the gameplay. Different constructs (levels) are based on different human emotions, ranging from joy, to fear, disappointment to 'feeling old' The puzzle bits aren't too bewildering. I think I've looked something up twice. One time it was something I'd never have thought of, the second time it seemed very obvious in hindsight.
01/19/26 - CD Projekt Red has sold more than 85 million games of its The Witcher series worldwide to date. This is confirmed by CEO Michal Nowakowski on X. The sales figures of the three games at a glance:
- The Witcher (PC): 10 million copies
- The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings (Xbox 360, PC): 15 million copies
- The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (PS5, Xbox Series, PS4, Xbox One, Switch, PC): 60 million copies
No, GG, no desire to do that.
I've been making some good progress in 'The Lair of the Clockwork God'. The humour is pretty good, as is the gameplay. Different constructs (levels) are based on different human emotions, ranging from joy, to fear, disappointment to 'feeling old'
The puzzle bits aren't too bewildering. I think I've looked something up twice. One time it was something I'd never have thought of, the second time it seemed very obvious in hindsight.