An unannounced co-op action RPG set in The Witcher universe is reportedly in development for PC and mobile, with no console version currently mentioned in the claim.

The details come from MP1st, which describes the project as a free-to-play co-op game where players create their own witcher instead of stepping directly into Geralt's boots. CD PROJEKT RED has not announced the project, confirmed the report or given the game a release window.

According to the report, the game is set in 1230, during a period when Geralt is still young. Players would make a custom witcher with gender and appearance options, then take on monster contracts across familiar Witcher-style locations including forests, villages and haunted ruins.

Combat is reportedly skill-driven, with players able to shape their character through abilities tied to different Witcher schools. The report also mentions signs, potion brewing, blocks, dodges, parries and executions, which would put the pitch closer to an action RPG than a passive mobile spin-off.

The report lands during a busy Witcher stretch

The PC and mobile platform claim is the sharpest part of the report. The Witcher has had mobile releases before, including Gwent and Thronebreaker, while The Witcher: Monster Slayer shut down in 2023 after failing to build a lasting audience. A co-op action RPG would be a more aggressive attempt to bring the series to phones, especially if the project really is also planned for PC.

There is already at least one publicly known multiplayer Witcher project in CD PROJEKT's pipeline. In its 2022 strategy update, CD PROJEKT described Project Sirius as a Witcher game from The Molasses Flood that would offer both single-player and multiplayer gameplay. MP1st says the newly reported game shares some surface similarities with Sirius, but frames it as a separate unannounced project.

CD PROJEKT is also juggling several other Witcher plans. The company has a new mainline Witcher saga in development, a remake of the first Witcher game and the upcoming Witcher 3 expansion Songs of the Past. That expansion is being positioned as a return to Geralt's world while the next trilogy remains further out, and CD PROJEKT has said Songs of the Past can work as a loose bridge toward The Witcher 4.

MP1st says it could not confirm which studio is developing the reported co-op game. The outlet points to CD PROJEKT's previously announced partnership with Scopely as one possible connection, but that link remains speculative unless CD PROJEKT or Scopely confirms the game.

Until then, it should be treated as a reported Witcher spin-off, not an announced release. If accurate, the combination of co-op contracts, custom witchers, PC support and a mobile focus would make it one of the franchise's biggest experiments outside the single-player RPG lane.