Whilst you're likely getting an improved BG3 showing if you wait for further updates before a complete playthrough (which I'm going to do, need a new GPU anyway, as the game is more taxing than it was for me during early EA days):
The release of Cyberpunk included versions that were pulled from official shops full-stop. Official statements released adressing the release state of the game and player reaction. And a player reception that on all platforms went from "seriously hyped" to "mildly disillusioned" pretty darn quick, and that wasn't merely for technicals (prior to release there was apparently a lot of overhyping going on in terms of marketing features likewise). The Steam and Metacritic ratings alone are still trying to recover from that.
Just saying.
I may pick up Cyberpunk one day too though, as it seems to have (mild) elements from Deus Ex. Witcher 3 bored me quickly, as technically, it's a glorified cutscene with very little gameplay (such as the ho-hum combat) and a barebones character progression system that at times feels as if it was tacked on so the game could still be marketed as an RPG. Even the quests, whilst entertaining narrative wise, pretty much solve themselves, as witcher senses are mandatory and the quests are completely linear. It's like following the red dotted lines and fighting monsters in between, quest complete. Several people told me the expansions would improve on that some. But the first Witcher game at least had you actually gather clues and think for yourself on the occasion.
That's just my preference though -- CD Projekt view games sort of like movies. Whilst there is cinematic games I like, I generally prefer games being... games. In fact, I think the trend to go "cinematic" has massively hurt the potential games have as a medium, storytelling-wise also. Mind you, Larian too has blown lots of its budget of BG3 on cinematics... But they're still offering a systems driven game, not one where you follow the dotted lines to progress one cutscene to the next one, at which point you may as well release the damn thing as a Netflix series (to somewhat exaggerate).As a result, I wasn't actually too fond of Larian's Original Sin tbh. But I spent far more time on that than on either Witcher game.