There are things to know about Cyberpunk 2077.

There is a side quest in Cyberpunk 2077.

Cyberpunk 2077 is a video game about a world where wealth disparity, artificial intelligence, and consciousness can be downloaded into other bodies. There is a side quest called "Violence" that it contains. At the time of the video game's release in 2020, Lizzy Wizzy was still in a relationship with Musk.

The main character, V, was hired to surveil her boyfriend, whom she suspects of cheating. V was taken aback by how low the stakes were compared to the other hijinks. Why not speak to him?

We are never alone. She says that she's always surrounded by assistants, PR reps, makeup artists. I stop smiling at him for a second and it will be all over the town.

Liam Northom is said to be forty-ish. It's sensitive. Guy who didn't want anything. She explains that Liam is her manager in a way that doesn't fit with the rest of the dialogue.

When a pop star sneaks off to a seedy motel in order to hire a mercenary, she has a hard time getting a private conversation with her manager. Why would tabloids care if she smiles at her boss? The guy who never wanted for anything is what it means. Is emerald mines involved?

Weak dialogue and inconsistent character building are nothing new in Cyberpunk 2077.

There is no complicated elements in the quest. You sneak into a nightclub and record a conversation between Liam and a woman. He has secretly backed up a digital version of her consciousness to make sure her career doesn't end too early. He asked the not-neuralink corporate rep if he could modify her personality to remove undesirable qualities. She hasn't been herself ever since she converted.

The person logs off from the system. Johnny is horrified and encourages him to tell the whole truth. She will hang up if you give her the recording of Liam's conversation. She called again and asked you to meet her at the same motel. There is a corpse lying on the ground next to her. If you want to help her again, you have to dump Liam in a garbage chute.

That's sort of it. You get some text messages from Lizzy Wizzy about how much she wants to make a new album. She murders him and pays someone to throw him in the trash because she doesn't want to forgive him.

I think it's around forty-ish. It's sensitive. Guy who didn't want anything.

Due to Cyberpunk's production issues, the "Violence" side quest may have had to be shortened. It doesn't feel full. It's not all that funny. The console-breakingly bad bugs that plagued its release have since been addressed, and all in all, Cyberpunk 2077. This game's writing is so weak that a quest where you throw Musk down a garbage chute is unmemorable.

At the time of the game's release, Musk was in a different position than he is today. He was the guy who made Cybertrucks, which looked like they were straight out of Cyberpunk 207, and now he is the guy who thinks strategy games are better than chess and has the worst Elden Ring build you've ever seen. He and his partner are no longer together.

The "Violence" side quest might have been too far ahead of its time because of the various rumors of infidelity and the fact that his popularity has waned. Liam Northom could have become more explicit in his allusion to the billionaire if it had been written today. Liam might be heavy due to the two shields he carries. You might be rewarded with a Cybertruck that is supposed to show up in your inventory later, but never does.

It is the only video game where you can throw Musk down a garbage chute. Don't put it in the next movie.