Edgerunners Can Quickhack Like She’s in Cyberpunk 2077 — Here’s How It Looks in Gameplay
In Cyberpunk Edgerunners, the iconic character of David Martinez (and by extension, the entire edgerunner culture of Night City) wields a deadly combination of combat prowess, emotional intensity, and high-tech hacking. One of the most visually striking and mechanically satisfying aspects of the series is how seamlessly quickhacking is integrated into action — especially when the protagonist, David, goes full cyber-chaos during his rise as a legendary edgerunner.
So, how does it actually look in gameplay — and how does it compare to the real mechanics in Cyberpunk 2077?
🔥 Quickhack in Cyberpunk Edgerunners – The Animated Version
In the anime, quickhacking isn’t just a menu or a button press — it’s a cinematic, high-octane sequence that mirrors the game’s mechanics but with hyper-stylized flair.
Trigger: When David is in combat, he might spot an enemy with a smart weapon or a drone.
Activation: He throws his neural interface (the "cyberdeck") into motion, and the world slows down into a digital overlay — think The Matrix meets Tron.
Visuals: A translucent HUD overlays Night City’s chaos — enemy vitals pulse in red, drones blink with data streams, and security cameras flicker like broken code.
Execution: David "hacks" a sniper’s scope, causing it to malfunction and fire wildly. Or he hijacks a drone, turning it into a flying explosive that rains fire on enemy troops.
Impact: The enemy is caught off guard — their weapons jam, their comms go silent, and they’re forced into disarray. The moment feels instant, brutal, and stylish.
This is not just for show — it’s a direct reflection of how quickhacking works in Cyberpunk 2077, but with anime-level polish.
🎮 How It Would Look in Actual Gameplay (Based on Cyberpunk 2077)
In the actual game, quickhacking (via the Neural Link or Cyberdeck) works like this:
During Combat: Press Quickhack (default: Q) while targeting an enemy or object.
The Hack Begins: The screen distorts into a hack sequence — a 3D interface of glowing nodes, data streams, and hacking mini-games.
Mini-Game: You must match patterns, rotate nodes, or predict enemy movements under time pressure.
Result:
Drones explode mid-flight.
Security turrets turn on their allies.
Enemies’ weapons jam or go rogue.
Doors unlock, cameras blink, or systems go offline.
💡 Pro Tip: Use hacking builds (e.g., "Data Thief" or "Sonic Jammer") to maximize damage and utility.
🎨 Why the Anime Makes It Feel So Real
The Edgerunners anime doesn’t just copy the game — it elevates the hacking experience by:
Showing the mind behind the hack: David isn’t just pressing buttons — he’s thinking, reacting, and improvising under pressure.
Emphasizing consequences: A failed hack means a teammate gets shot. A perfect one turns the tide.
Blending style with function: The neon-lit haptic feedback, the sound design (beeps, glitches, digital screams), and the emotional stakes make every hack feel personal and dangerous.
🔚 Final Thoughts: Why This Matters
Whether you’re a fan of the anime, the game, or both, the way quickhacking is portrayed in Cyberpunk Edgerunners proves that hacking isn’t just a mechanic — it’s a character trait.
David isn’t just a hacker — he’s a master of chaos, turning digital systems into weapons of survival. And that’s exactly how it feels in gameplay: fast, slick, and deadly.
So if you’ve ever thought, "I wish I could quickhack like David in Edgerunners," — now you know: it’s not just possible. It’s legendary.
🎮 Want to try it yourself?
Play Cyberpunk 2077 on Hard Mode with Cyberdeck Pro build.
Use Neural Link + Quickhack (Q) in combat.
Watch David’s final hack in Episode 8 — and feel the adrenaline.
🚨 “I’m not here to survive. I’m here to break the system.”
— David Martinez, Cyberpunk Edgerunners
🔥 Ready to hack like an edgerunner? The night is yours.