Skip to main content

Which lifepath should you choose in Cyberpunk 2077?

Cyberpunk 2077 takes a lot of notes from the tabletop RPG on which it’s based, and nowhere is that more clear than with lifepaths. Lifepaths change how you start in Night City, forming the basis for your character while giving you different dialogue options throughout the game. Although all players will end up at the same spot after about an hour or so, the beginning moments for each lifepath are unique.

But, which one should you choose? Lifepaths change how you start your journey in Night City, sure, but also how you approach the city for the rest of the game. In this guide, we’ll give you a quick overview of each lifepath in Cyberpunk 2077, as well as the differences between them.

Further reading

What are the differences between lifepaths?

There are two major differences between each of the lifepaths in Cyberpunk 2077. The first is the prologue. Each lifepath has its own prologue that will introduce you to the world and to Jackie Welles, as well as give you some background on the lifepath you chose. The first few missions for each lifepath are different. However, all players end up at the same starting point shortly after the game begins, so don’t worry about missing out on any main story content.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

You will miss out on dialogue choices, however. Each lifepath will give you different dialogue choices in certain situations that would otherwise be inaccessible. If you’re a Streetkid, for example, you might be able to use your reputation in the neighborhood during negotiations on your home turf. However, that negotiation may not work in the City Center, where someone on the Corpo life path might carry more weight.

Additionally, your lifepath influences the clothes you start the game with, as well as some of the characters tied to lifepath-exclusive side quests.

That’s all your lifepath influences. There aren’t any exclusive perks, weapons, or endings tied to a specific lifepath. Because of that, you shouldn’t worry too much about picking (there isn’t a “best” option). Although you’ll have access to exclusive side quests and dialogue options throughout the game, your lifepath mainly just influences how you’ll start your journey in Cyberpunk 2077. 

Streetkid

Image used with permission by copyright holder

As a Streetkid, you live by your own rules. Raised by small-time criminals, you know how to lie, cheat, and steal to survive. You’re the bottom of the totem pole, but you know how to exploit Night City’s underbelly to get what you want.

If you choose Streetkid as your lifepath, you’ll start Cyberpunk 2077 at the El Coyote Cojo in Heywood after arriving back in Night City from a job in Atlanta. Pepe, the bartender, clues you in that he’s in deep and that he needs help. After talking with a fixer at the bar, you agree to help Pepe out by finishing a job.

Because you grew up on the streets, many of the gangs and fixers around Night City will be a little more welcoming (as welcoming as they can be, anyway), while NCPD officers and Corpos will be suspicious of you.

Out of all of the Lifepaths, the Streetkid dialogue choices are the most useful. Most of your time in Night City will be spent with fixers and gang members, and Street Kids have more dialogue choices with them.

Nomad

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Nomads grew up outside the walls of Night City, forming into tribes in the outskirt Badlands to scavenge, steal, and build to get by. As a Nomad, you have a strong sense of community, working with your tribe to smuggle what you need out of Night City and flip it for a profit.

Not that Nomads care about money. As the outcasts of Night City, Nomads are simply concerned with survival, preferring to stay in their clans outside of the city limits, and only venturing in when absolutely necessary.

The Nomad lifepath begins with you meeting up with Jackie Welles in The Badlands to smuggle contraband past Militech soldiers at a Night City checkpoint. We won’t spoil how the interaction goes, but after, V and Jackie decide that a life inside Night City might not be so bad afterall.

As far as dialogue choices go, Nomads do well with other Nomads. There’s a sense of comradery between Nomads, but not between Nomads and others. Corpos look at Streetkids as nuisances, but they look at Nomads as fiends. Streetkids themselves don’t take kindly to outsiders, either.

Corpo

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Corpo lifepath strikes at the heart of Night City. As an Arasaka agent, you know how to exploit the corporate system to get ahead, and you have plenty of dirt on your rivals. The few smiles that show up in Corpo life always hide something worse — as an Arasaka agent, it’s killed or be killed.

Corpos are fit with the latest and most powerful Cyberware, and if that doesn’t do that trick, Militech soldiers will back you up. The City Center is where you work and play, surrounded by buildings of impossible scale (a constant reminder to the citizens of Night City that you are more powerful than them).

If you choose to start as a Corpo, you’ll begin life in Arasaka Tower as a counter-intel specialist. After a brief call with your friend Jackie — who’s quick to remind you of the dangers of corporate life — you meet with Agent Jenkins, who gives you a secret relic that no one else at the Arasaka Corporation can know about.

Knowing the ins and outs of corporate life has its upsides, though. As a Corpo, you know how to make deals with Night City elites, and you know how to spot a trap when you see one. On the other hand, Streetkids and Nomads don’t take kindly to Corpos, and they’re quick to remind you of that fact.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty Relic guide
Songbird in a dress in Phantom Liberty.

The first and only expansion for Cyberpunk 2077 has far more than just a new area and missions to fill your time. Phantom Liberty is part of the 2.0 update that almost completely overhauls the systems introduced in the base game to be more in line with the original vision, It also adds new mechanics to flesh out the experience even further. Once you start the expansion, the first thing you will probably notice is the completely revamped skill system, which now includes a brand new tree called the Relic tree. These skills are all brand new, and alone could be reason enough to start a fresh adventure in Night City. But these Relic skills don't function like the other skills where you simply need to level up to unlock and upgrade them. Don't worry, Samurai, we'll transfer all the data you need on how to get Relic skills and what each of them does.
How to get Relic points
The new Relic skill tree is the only new feature in terms of skills that you need to purchase the Phantom Liberty expansion to access. Once you begin the expansion, the tree and a few starting points will be given to you automatically from a new character. To get more Relic points, you have to track down a new feature called Militech Data Terminals rather than simply leveling up. These points will only pop up on your map once you're close to them, so you will need to search them out for the most part.
All Relic skills

The Relic skill tree is broken down into three branches: Jailbreak, Emergency Cloaking, and Vulnerability. Just like any normal skill tree, you need to unlock each skill in order to gain access to the next one, so planning out which branch you want to invest in before spending your precious points is vital, especially since some trees have many more levels to them than others. Here's what each branch gives you:
Jailbreak
Jailbreak: Unlocks new abilities for your Arm Cyberwear, including the Mantis Blades, Gorilla Arms, Projectile Launch System, and Monowire.

Read more
Cyberpunk 2077: How to start Phantom Liberty DLC
A pyramid from Cyberpunk 2077.

The rehabilitation of Cyberpunk 2077 finally culminates in both the release of the 2.0 update and the substantial DLC expansion called Phantom Liberty. Between these two, plus all the changes made in the years since launch, the once unstable and buggy game is finally living up to its potential. While everything up until this point has been free, including the 2.0 changes, Phantom Liberty is the first and only piece of paid content. Giving players an entirely new area in Dogtown to explore, plus a lengthy main story and tons of new side missions, it's the biggest reason to reinstall this ambitious title. But how exactly can you start the DLC since it is meant to slot into the story of the main game rather than take place before or after? We've hacked in and downloaded all the data you need on how to start the Phantom Liberty DLC.
How to start Phantom Liberty
There are actually a few different ways to get into Phantom Liberty depending on your preference and whether or not you've played the base game. The easiest way to get directly into it is through the main menu. With the DLC installed, you will have an option to jump directly into the expansion, even if you haven't played the main game yet. This sounds great for those who want to see the new stuff right away, but it isn't recommended if you haven't played the base game at all. You will be given a character automatically leveled up and placed at the proper point in the story for the DLC to take place with no context or tutorial on how to play. Note that picking this option doesn't lock you out of any of the base game content.

For new players who want to experience Phantom Liberty more naturally, you will need to play the opening hours of Cyberpunk 2077 until you complete the "Transmission" mission before the quest that starts the DLC will trigger.

Read more
These are the only gaming laptops you should consider if you want to play Starfield
Stadium lighting on the Alienware x16 laptop.

Starfield will undoubtedly be one of the biggest game releases of the year, and to experience it in its full glory, you'll need some serious horsepower. We've rounded up five of the best gaming laptops that should be able to chew through the game on release day.

We review dozens of gaming laptops each year, and Starfield is shaping up to challenge even the most powerful hardware. Here are the gaming laptops that can stand up to the game and still deliver great performance.

Read more