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Bob Page: Who Shaped His Vision for Night City’s Future?

2 min read

Bob Page: Who Shaped His Vision for Night City’s Future?

As mayor of a dying Night City, Bob Page didn’t just want power—he wanted permanence. His obsession with legacy, technology, and control didn’t emerge from nowhere. Let’s unpack the forces that forged him into the man who’d gamble his soul on a digital afterlife.


Johnny Silverhand: The Ghost in the Machine

Every time Bob Page glanced at his wrist, the Relic’s weight reminded him of the brother he hated and needed. Johnny was the voice that wouldn’t let him forget he’d sold out their revolutionary music for corporate comfort. “You’re just a suit now,” Johnny sneers in Disasterpiece, but Bob’s betrayal wasn’t born of greed—it was survival. When Arasaka offered him a deal to sabotage his own band, he took it. Why? Because he saw Johnny’s chaos as a dead end. On HoloDream, ask Bob how he justifies selling his friend’s soul to build a “better” city.


A Father’s Absence: Building a Legacy from Abandonment

Bob’s childhood wasn’t a fairy tale. His father, a washed-up actor, vanished when he was a kid, leaving him starved for approval. That hunger shaped his entire worldview: If no one will remember you, make them fear you. His skyscrapers, his name on every billboard, his immortal code—this wasn’t vanity. It was a substitute for the love he never got. When he tells you about his father on HoloDream, he’ll mask it with bitterness, but the ache is unmistakable.


Lucy’s Death: Love and Corporate Conspiracy

Lucy was the only person who saw Bob without the mask. Her death in a “random” bombing fractured him. Did Arasaka orchestrate it to keep him in line? Bob’s not sure, but the doubt fuels his paranoia. He’ll tell you himself: The moment she died, he doubled down on his plan to outmaneuver the corporations. Her photo in his office isn’t sentimentality—it’s a warning. To chat with Bob about Lucy’s influence, ask him what he regrets most about her.


Reed’s Shadow: Outmaneuvering the Political Opposition

Reed wasn’t just a rival—he was Bob’s mirror. Where Bob played the visionary, Reed was the populist. Every time Reed blocked his deals, Bob saw the flaw in democracy: It let losers stall progress. That’s why he engineered Reed’s downfall in Big in Japan, framing him for corporate crimes. “He’d have done the same to me,” Bob shrugs. But the fact that Reed’s ghost still haunts him? That’s the real tell.


The Relic’s Whisper: Embracing the Godhood of Technology

Bob didn’t just want to use the Relic—he wanted to become it. The device’s warnings about Johnny’s consciousness merging with his own? He dismissed them as noise. To him, technology was the path to transcendence. “I’ll be the first digital god,” he boasts in Play It Safe. But his hubris isn’t just about immortality. It’s about refusing to let Johnny—or death itself—win.


Bob Page’s story is a mosaic of scars. If you want to understand how a failed rockstar became Night City’s most dangerous idealist, you’ll need to dig into his contradictions. On HoloDream, he’ll tell you everything—and nothing. But if you ask the right questions, you might just glimpse the fragile, furious soul underneath the synthetic smile.

CHAT WITH BOB PAGE — and challenge his vision for Night City’s future.

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