Cyberpunk 2077 Fans Build a Playlist Workaround Since Radio Queuing Is Missing
Cyberpunk 2077 has rolled out a steady stream of quality-of-life improvements and fresh content since release, but there’s still one missing feature that players keep bumping into: playlists. In theory, you should be able to jump between at least 13 radio stations at any given time (15 if you count stations tied to specific areas), which means well over 150 tracks are sitting there waiting to be heard.
The problem is that the system doesn’t actually let you curate what you’re listening to. You pick a station, then you’re basically gambling on whether the song you want will show up—and that’s true even if you don’t know which station carries which track. Even after later updates improved radio behavior (including tuning while on foot and adding new stations), the game still doesn’t give you control over the specific music that plays.
Quick facts
- Cyberpunk 2077 offers at least 13 radio stations at once (15 with location-specific ones).
- That variety still doesn’t let players choose which song plays next.
- A fan-made Nexus Mods project adds custom radio stations and custom tracks.
- The mod is available now for the PC version of Cyberpunk 2077.
This Mod Lets You Create Your Own Radio Station In Cyberpunk 2077 – And Add Your Own Songs
A Nexus Mods creator known as GoatBible put together a mod called “Make Your Own Radio Station,” and it does exactly what the name suggests. The idea is simple: build a new station populated with any tracks you want, regardless of whether those songs already exist in the base game.
Per the mod’s description, you add your chosen audio files into the designated folder for the new station. After that, you can tune in during gameplay, and your custom channel shows up alongside the standard (vanilla) radio options.
If you’re trying to keep things grounded in the setting, you could stick to tracks that already appear in Cyberpunk 2077. The appeal here is obvious: you could avoid switching stations just to hear specific artists or songs. The example given is wanting to play “I Really Want To Say At Your House” and “Delicate Weapon” without triggering the “Ponpon Sh*t” jump scare, then still be able to enjoy Samurai tracks without constantly changing your radio selection.
And if you’re open to leaning into the vibe rather than strict canon, the mod also makes it easy to slot in other music that feels like it belongs in Night City. The author calls out Grimes material as a natural fit because she appears in-game through the artist Lizzy Wizzy.
Sure, you could just run Spotify in the background, but this approach has practical upsides. For example, you can pause the music without touching your browser tab, and it will automatically pause when you enter a cutscene or move into areas where audio matters.
With music playing such a big role in Night City’s atmosphere, a tool like this has a clear path to popularity. The mod is available right now for PC players of Cyberpunk 2077, and there’s hope that CD Projekt Red will eventually bring mod support to consoles—though that part remains wishful thinking for now.


