Full story
About The Witcher 4
The Witcher 4, internally codenamed Polaris, is the first entry in a new Witcher saga from CD Projekt Red, shifting the series away from Geralt of Rivia and placing Ciri of Cintra at the center of the story. Announced with a cinematic trailer at The Game Awards 2024, the game depicts Ciri as a full-fledged witcher navigating a world still reeling from the events of The Wild Hunt. It is being built in Unreal Engine 5.
Development is led out of CD Projekt Red's Warsaw and Boston studios, with full production having begun in late 2024 after the successful launch of Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty. The team is targeting an open-world experience larger and more reactive than The Witcher 3. Doug Cockle, the voice of Geralt, has indicated he may return in some capacity.
A 2027 release window is the current internal target communicated to investors, with platforms expected to include PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X|S. The project anchors a broader Witcher renaissance that also includes a remake of the original 2007 game by Fool's Theory and a multiplayer Witcher spin-off.
Overview
Why this games page exists
The Witcher 4 is CD Projekt Red's next flagship RPG, built in Unreal Engine 5 and starring Ciri. It is one of the most-anticipated RPG countdowns of the decade.
Why it matters
The Witcher 4 launches a new trilogy led by Ciri and represents CD Projekt Red's first mainline Witcher since 2015's genre-defining The Wild Hunt.
The details
Key highlights
- Venue
- PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S
- Format
- Open-world action RPG built in Unreal Engine 5
- Headliner
- Developed by CD Projekt Red (Warsaw and Boston)
- Audience
- Fans of narrative-driven fantasy RPGs and The Witcher saga
Reading the timer
How to use this games countdown
The Witcher 4 sits inside the games calendar as a action rpg date that people are likely to check more than once. This page is meant to do more than show a raw countdown number: it keeps the tracked date, source quality, location context, and release confidence in one place so the page stays useful even when the final event details are still tightening.
Right now the key public signal is 2027, with expected status and year window precision. That distinction matters. A confirmed datetime is very different from a month-level or date-only signal, and people planning watch parties, travel, ticketing, launch coverage, or newsroom publishing need that nuance instead of a misleadingly precise timer.
We are tracking The Witcher 4 from Wikipedia / CD Projekt Red plus the official event source. For this page, that means the safest way to read the countdown is as a reference layer: use the timer for awareness, then use the source, precision, location, and event facts together before you commit to travel, viewing plans, promotional scheduling, or time-sensitive announcements.
The most practical reading of this countdown is: The Witcher 4 is being watched for a globally tracked release or event page, and the current page focus is the main action rpg milestone rather than every surrounding rumor or speculative date. Type: Game release. Genre: Open-world action RPG.
The Witcher 4 needs game-specific context because launch timing often depends on platform readiness, preload access, editions, and staggered unlock rules. A countdown page is most useful when it reminds players and writers that a “release date” can still hide multiple real moments: embargoes, early access, patch windows, and region-based activation. This page currently tracks type: Game release, genre: Open-world action RPG, platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S. That extra context helps separate The Witcher 4 from other the witcher, cd projekt red, ciri, action rpg countdowns that would otherwise look interchangeable.

