CD Projekt Red’s Cyberpunk 2077 continues to receive attention long after its rocky 2020 launch, thanks to steady updates, mods, and now a fresh wave of merchandise that leans into the game’s neon-soaked aesthetic. The latest addition comes from FiGGYZ, a line of pop magnet collectibles featuring pixel-art characters that magnetically attach to display backdrops. This marks the second batch of Cyberpunk 2077-themed items from the company, offering fans a small, tangible way to keep Night City on their shelves while they wait for bigger developments.
The new limited-edition figures include four characters: Viktor, Jackie, Goro, and Adam Smasher. Each magnetized pixel-art piece is priced individually around $15, or the full set can be bundled for roughly $55. FiGGYZ has built a growing catalog of similar collectibles drawn from various games and franchises, including The Witcher series, Banjo-Kazooie, Silent Hill, and others. For collectors who enjoy display-friendly, stylized merch inspired by the gritty alleys and glowing streets of Cyberpunk 2077, these pieces provide a compact and relatively affordable option.
Time to chrome up, choom! Orders for Cyberpunk 2077 FiGGYZ Wave 2 are live right now! Build your Night City legend with Viktor, Jackie, Goro, and Adam Smasher in vibrant pixel art form. These FiGGYZ snap magnetically onto backdrops inspired by the neon streets and gritty alleys… pic.twitter.com/4IQtbmVWXE
— FiGGYZ (@FiGGYZOfficial) April 8, 2026
The timing of the release feels deliberate. With a full sequel, internally known as Project Orion, officially confirmed but still years away, CD Projekt Red’s immediate focus remains on The Witcher 4. That leaves Cyberpunk 2077 fans filling the gap with whatever keeps the world alive: graphic mode enhancements for the PS5 Pro, community mods, new comics, and now these collectibles. It is a familiar pattern for long-running franchises—keeping the fanbase engaged through smaller drops rather than major new content.
Details on Project Orion remain sparse. Fan speculation points toward a setting roughly in the 2080s, with some theories suggesting a shift away from Night City to somewhere like Chicago. None of that has been confirmed by the studio. For now, the original game, patched and expanded over the years, still serves as the main entry point into the universe. Its open-world design, moral choices, and cybernetic upgrades have aged into a more stable experience than many expected at launch, though it never fully escaped the shadow of its troubled debut.
The FiGGYZ collectibles will likely appeal most to dedicated players who want physical reminders of their favorite fixers, mercs, and villains. They are not a substitute for new gameplay or story, but they do reflect how Cyberpunk 2077 has managed to sustain interest well into 2026 through a mix of official support and fan-driven extensions. Whether that momentum can carry over to a sequel that meets the heightened expectations built over half a decade is another question entirely.
In the meantime, these small merchandise releases serve as quiet reminders that Night City never really went away. They offer a low-stakes way for chooms to show their loyalty while the larger future of the franchise slowly takes shape behind closed doors at CD Projekt Red.
