Cyperpunk 2077 looks like one of the greatest games ever made to me. I'm very excited. Also I'm extremely interested in Bethesda's Starfield. I would also like to play that indie Disco game, as it sounds very intriguing, and they have some terrific graphics, smartly using the low budget. Kenshi also looks very interesting, even if many here don't really consider it an RPG at all.
My RPG career (outside of board D&D and AD&D) started in 1989 with Pool Of Radiance and Ultima V. Unforgettable games for me - And I would never touch them these days.
I largely missed the PC RPG craze of the 90's as I didn't have a proper computer to run heavier games. But in 1998 I started Nethack, which became one of the milestones for me.
Then in the 2000's some of the greatest RPG gaming experiences ever: Oblivion with OOO and some other mods. First Mass Effect. First Witcher. These were huge milestones for me. They all blew my mind.
Also Gothic 2 & 3. G3 was buggy as hell, with limited gameplay, but I still found the open world very immersive. Amazing landscape design. Also, first Risen.
And Fallout 3 and New Vegas. I did get kinda bored with "humorous" approach to apocalypse thought, and didn't get very excited about Fallout 4. I would vastly prefer an approach similar to STALKER games. Those should probably be considered FPS games with RPG elements, than vice versa. Buggy as shit, but amazing atmosphere.
In the 2010's I stopped playing RPG's due to work and a too lousy computer. So I still haven't properly played Skyrim, haven't even touched Witcher 3, or Kingdom Come. I intend to play all now, as they seem great, with my awesome new computer that can play the latest games with all the stats maxed to top.
Nowadays I vastly prefer first person view, as I find it much more immersive. In general I consider immersion more important than math and micro-managing in RPG's.
A couple of years ago I tried to play the graphical update of Baldur's Gate 2. I know I would have loved it in the 90's, but despite solid graphics the game felt very dated to me. I had to spend so much time micro-managing things and fighting an enormous amount of battles with repeated tactics (Because repeating the same tactic was the most effective way to win), that ultimately I found it dull. I quit after 20-30 hours of gameplay.
As for other games: Adventure games like Future Wars and Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis. GTA Vice City and GTA San Andreas. Unreal Tournament. Rat Race on Vic-20. Pong on Atari console. Yes, I started videogaming with Pong in 1980. Thief 3 (I missed the first two on time of release). World Of Goo. Tetris on C-64. Decathlon on C-64. Worms. Lemmings. Speedball 2. First Halo. The list goes on and on…