the most interesting thing about cyberpunk to me is actually the fact that it is real

protests outside the trump tower

begging for bitcoins in hong kong with a QR code

parking lot patrol robot.

beijing subway ads

click farming

tattoo artist's prosthetic arm
maybe not everything in your life is cyberpunk all the time, but the world you live in is undoubtedly cyberpunk now.
we are at the very least in the early stages of the sort of future that cyberpunk depicted. which is what I think separates cyberpunk from other sci-fi. the aesthetic and the attitude of it are both very heavily grounded in the actual reality we live in.
cyberpunk's core is very heavily founded in that idea. this is why I personally am not too interested in depictions of cyberpunk futures where everything is pristine and clean or everything is super flat and minimal all the time. I'm not too interested in portrayals of cyberpunk that stray from the norm of what the genre is, and what the aesthetic of cyberpunk is, because to me those things just miss the point.
Those rainy streets with neon lights are impactful because that is a future that actually exists, one that is very clearly and directly informed by the current world we live in. the "dirty future" isn't so much an artistic vision as it is just an obvious conclusion to make when thinking about what the future will actually be like. cyberpunk is a very organic thing to me, and to be honest crediting any author with it is silly because I think somebody would have drawn the conclusion no matter what, or it would have just happened on its own. it seems like the inevitable reality to me.
there's places in china right now that look more cyberpunk than anything William Gibson could have ever dreamed up