Cyberpunk 2077 Lore Night City Style

Style over substance. It doesn’t’ matter how well you do something, as long as you look good doing it. In the distinct visual aesthetic of Night City, style is everything, so let us examine what is currently in vogue. With TechHair, the shafts of artificial hair are impregnated with reactive chemicals that are temperature sensitive, changing colour depending on the weather.

Techhair can be implanted in places of interest which I will leave to your imagination. Fashion cyberware, is designed to be overtly visible. This style is popular among the social elite-corporate heirs, braindance stars, celebrities and residents of North Oak.

Flowing gold and platinum lines woven into the most advanced RealSkinn or even complete Dermal replacement. Anatomical cyberlimbs made of pure crystal, artificially cultivated on orbital stations, or plated with natural wooden tiles worth tens of thousands of Eurodollars.

This style of cyberware is almost purely decorative to signify status and wealth. RealSkinn, is virtually indistinguishable from natural skin. It is the standard in covering implants. More sophisticated versions include the SynthSkin based on colour-shifting plastic.

ChemSkins are special dyes which are impregnated into the skin. Some, change the skin colour to a new shade as desired. Others are temperature sensitive, while chemskins react to hormonal changes, for instance, yellow and black tiger stripes appear on your skin during copulation.

Kiroshi Optics mimic normal eyes, although a wide variety of fashion iris colours are available. These designs are popularised by celebrities such as Us Cracks. Many fashion savvy edgerunners appreciate the eye colour customisation that automatically matches your clothes and surroundings.

Need something robust and precise? Then the Mr. Stud, penis enhancer might just satisfy your needs. Marketed with the slogan All night, every night, and she’ll never know. I can also wholeheartedly endorse the Midnight Lady for the distaff side. For social affairs, quality clothing such as a Samurai jacket, composed of tactical digital fabric, will suffice.

Digital fabric allows integration of micro circuitry into the weave of material, allowing the cloth to have properties beyond mere adornment and protection. Some weaves incorporate light emitting threading that allows the material to act as a video receiver.

Other weaves are made up of vibrating monofibers that allows the cloth to emit sounds. You can also embed pheromone sprayers that emit perfumes or other scents. Still others have temperature regulation systems or sensors that can pick up the body’s natural electrical fields to gain important information on the wearer’s condition.

Most buttons and zippers incorporate microcomputers to control these functions. Heat sensitive patches and badges also allow the user to control functions of the digital fabric. Clothing can adapt themselves to temperature changes by monitoring body temperature, and tightening or relaxing the weave to let air in or out.

That Samurai logo might hold a greater purpose than just style and showing one’s devotion to Johnny Silverhand. The weave can also adapt itself in situations to bestow additional protection in hostile conditions, such as being weatherproof, acid proof, fireproof or harden itself to protect the wearer against various types of attack.