Fans of The Witcher franchise should be prepared for an awesome third installment as The Sydney Morning Herald's interview with the game creators reveals that The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt might just be Projekt Red's best game ever.

The outlet spoke with Tomasz Jarzębowski, Projekt Red's global head of marketing, who said, "Because we are developing the game for the Xbox One, PS4 and PC, we go nuts in terms of visuals. We want the game to look as beautiful as possible."

Jarzębowski also added, "I think we are in a good moment, we don't have to choose between better graphics or performance on either PC or consoles now, we can just create the best looking game possible."

Asked how far the game takes the processors in the current gen consoles, the Projekt Red executive responded, "If it maxes out the consoles? Well, the future will tell."

"There are games that are being released for current-gen that look way better than everything created so far. We are always getting wiser and wiser, so I expect our next game will look even better," he continued.

Aside from impressive graphics and visuals, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt gamers should also be prepared for an adventure like no other. The Witcher 3 will reportedly be an open world and a world 35 times bigger than the 2nd installment of the game franchise.

The game will also allegedly have 36 different endings, reports The Sydney Morning Herald. "You have three different playable epilogues and within each of those there are 12 different world states, depending on the choices you make. So it gives you 36 variations on how the world can exist at the end of the game," says Jarzębowski.

"It was not our aim to come up with a cool number of endings to talk about. We just followed the story and just took the most important events in the game, which bring their own consequences, and created a world to show you the result of your actions at the end," the Projekt Red exec said.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is due out February 2015 after the devs delayed the initial 2014 alleged release date, claiming that the title needed "manual fine tuning" and "thorough testing" in its final stages.