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Steam News24 November 20257mo ago

Introducing Profiler’s Log – Our Developer Diary Series

Today, we are opening a new chapter in the development story of Profiler Files New Orleans with the launch of a dedicated dev diary series, the Profiler’s Log.

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  • Gameplay
addedToday, we are opening a new chapter in the development story of Profiler Files New Orleans with the launch of a dedicated dev diary series, the Profiler’s Log .
changedProfiler’s Log will continue throughout development, with regular entries covering design, writing, production, gameplay direction, and the people behind the work.
addedYou can view Episode 1 right now on our YouTube channel, Profiler Files - New Orleans - the game - YouTube or read the transcript below.
addedThank you for following the journey and supporting the project as it grows. More episodes soon. Don't forget to play the demo - it's free and you can play the full first episode of the game. and of course, please, wishlist Profiler Files New Orleans - it matters a lot to us.
changedThat single change of perspective changed everything. We stayed close to psychology, darkness, and the grey areas of the human mind… but you now had a role with meaning, almost heroic.
addedIf you’d like to support the project, add Profiler Files New Orleans to your wishlist , follow the game, share it with your friends, and don’t forget to hit Subscribe to be part of the journey

Today, we are opening a new chapter in the development story of Profiler Files New Orleans with the launch of a dedicated dev diary series, the Profiler’s Log.

This series is designed to give you a clear look behind the scenes: our creative decisions, the challenges we face, the evolution of the project, and the principles guiding the game’s identity. Each entry will explore a specific aspect of development, giving you context, intentions, and concrete insights into how the game is built.

For this first installment, now live, we are going back to the roots of the project. Profiler’s Log #1: the origins retraces where the initial concept came from, how the core pillars of the experience were established, and how the game nos differs radically from what it was supposed to be in the first place. If you want to understand what shaped the DNA of our game, this is the best place to start.

Profiler’s Log will continue throughout development, with regular entries covering design, writing, production, gameplay direction, and the people behind the work.

You can view Episode 1 right now on our YouTube channel, Profiler Files - New Orleans - the game - YouTube or read the transcript below.

Thank you for following the journey and supporting the project as it grows. More episodes soon. Don't forget to play the demo - it's free and you can play the full first episode of the game. and of course, please, wishlist Profiler Files New Orleans - it matters a lot to us.

Hi, I’m David, the creator of Profiler Files, and I wanted to share with you the story of how the game was born… and how it ended up looking completely different from what we first imagined.

Originally, Profiler Files had almost nothing to do with the game you see today. The project started from a novel I published in France under the pen name David Forrest, called Serial. The book did really well: it’s written as the intimate diary of a serial killer, a raw and unsettling deep dive into his mind.

When the novel found its audience, turning that universe into a video game felt like the natural next step.

The very first game concept was simple… and extreme:

What if the player was the one writing that diary?

What if you actually played as the killer, day after day?

On paper, it was powerful. In practice, we quickly realized something important: most people don’t actually want to be the killer. There was a strong emotional and moral barrier. Players love thrillers, they enjoy tension and fear, but most of them prefer to stay on the side of those who search for the truth, not those who destroy lives.

That’s where the first major pivot happened: instead of playing the killer, you would play the one hunting them. The profiler.

That single change of perspective changed everything. We stayed close to psychology, darkness, and the grey areas of the human mind… but you now had a role with meaning, almost heroic.

Even with that change, the game at first remained very realistic and very dark. Visually, we were moving toward something tortured and oppressive, with clear inspirations from comics like Batman: Arkham Asylum: grimy environments drowned in shadows, creepy silhouettes, an atmosphere that felt almost sick.

It looked cool… but it felt crushing.

The deeper we went, the more we realized we were building a game that made you want to stop every ten minutes just to breathe. The tone was bleak, heavy, almost hostile to the player. And we knew that if the game stayed that relentlessly dark, it would only appeal to a very narrow audience.

At the same time, there was another big influence in the back of my mind:

I’m a huge fan of Ace Attorney, Phoenix Wright, and other narrative games from Capcom. Those games do something brilliant:

  • They’re about murders, justice, lies,

  • But they wrap all that in hilarious characters, sharp humor, and colorful, stylized art.

Watching that, I understood something:

If Profiler Files stayed “pure dark”, it would never be a truly welcoming game.

So we made a bold decision:

We shifted to a more “visual novel” approach, with a stylized art direction closer to those Capcom titles I love.

And that change wasn’t just about visuals. It completely transformed the tone of the game.

Our characters exploded to life. We began imagining completely over-the-top coworkers, suspects with absurd reactions, witnesses who can switch from hilarious to moving in a single line.

Humor became a core pillar. Not a little extra, but a deliberate artistic choice. We wanted Profiler Files to be a game where you laugh a lot, where you quickly grow attached to the cast, where every dialogue is something you look forward to.

But – and this is crucial – we never abandoned the seriousness underneath.

Behind the jokes and punchlines, the cases remain realistic, sad, and sometimes very dark. We deal with human drama, invisible scars, and social issues that clearly echo the real world.

The whole of Profiler Files is built on this contrast:

  • In the foreground: colorful characters, sometimes absurd situations, a light-hearted tone.

  • In the background: case files that hint at heavier themes, social cracks, and hard truths.

This “second layer” is never forced on you. If you just want to enjoy a series of fun investigations, with a crazy cast and lots of humor, the game absolutely works at that level.

But if you like to read between the lines, pay attention to details in the dialogue, and think about the context behind each case, you’ll notice there’s something deeper going on.

In Profiler Files, you step into the shoes of a slightly unconventional profiler, at the heart of a world where you analyze psychological profiles, scrutinize crime scenes, question what seems obvious and constantly juggle between the ridiculous side of situations and the tragic reality of what actually happened.

With this blend of comedy and drama, our goal is to create an experience that sticks with you. We want you to close the game thinking: “I laughed a lot… but some of these stories are going to stay with me.”

If you’re into offbeat crime stories, somewhere between Ace Attorney and a grounded psychological thriller, then Profiler Files was made with you in mind.

Thanks for reading this dev diary.

If you’d like to support the project, add Profiler Files New Orleans to your wishlist , follow the game, share it with your friends, and don’t forget to hit Subscribe to be part of the journey

See you soon for another Profiler’s Log !

Profiler Files New Orleans

Source

Steam News / 24 November 2025

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