


If you're looking for slightly more colourful arms, however, some modders have resorted to changing the colour of existing Cyberpunk 2077 cyberware (such as turning the gorilla arms red, or changing the projectile launcher to a metallic brown), while one has even managed to fish out Mox gang member Rita's arms to put on your own player. Another mod, Cyberarms Library by Padhiver, lets the player install Alt Cunningham's hand, Netwatch arms, and some more old-school nomad and street arms. It's a little tricky to set up and some of the skin at the top of the arm may be the wrong colour, as modders do not yet have the option to edit models, but it still looks pretty solid. One of the newest of these is Arasaka Cyberarms by Aanderz, which gives your arms a serious overhaul, and even gives you glowing mantis blades (which you may recognise from a certain boss fight). But the thing that excites me the most is this: modders have created several different ways for you to visibly modify your body. There's even a way to get your hands on some Trauma Team gear. Over the last few weeks, modders on Nexus Mods have been hard at work opening up further customisation options for players, be it the ability to change your haircut and appearance mid-game, or access some of the fancy clothes normally locked to Night City's NPCs. Where are the big red mechanical arms I was expecting? Why can't I have that NPC's robot legs? The lack of a cutscene or appearance change for most of Cyberpunk 2077's cyberware has disappointed a fair number of players, myself included - and while visible changes appear with a couple of hand and arm mods, even these are fairly subtle. No, seriously: when you decide to install some cyberware at the Ripperdoc, almost nothing happens. It's so quick and painless, you won't even know it's happening. In the world of Cyberpunk 2077, you can swap out your boring, run-of-the-mill human bones for an endoskeleton at the drop of a hat.
