: Beyond just watching videos, players must manage in-game spam emails and interact with NPCs through chat messages, choosing responses that range from professional to personal.

As a hired hacker, you are granted access to a simulated desktop. Your primary tool is a search bar where you enter tags—keywords like "family," "hobbies," or "secret"—to surface video clips and documents. The core experience is non-linear; as you find new tags mentioned in Jessika's vlogs, you dive deeper into her psyche. Features of the Digital Investigation

Jessika uses the voyeuristic nature of the internet to tell a story of human frailty. Unlike traditional games with branching paths, your choices in chat don't change the outcome; instead, the "game" is in the interpretation of the facts you uncover. It forces the player to act as both a judge and a witness to a tragedy already written. Jessika on Steam

: The game features 175 files, though the conclusion can be reached by finding only half of them—if you find the "right" ones.

In the digital age, a person’s legacy isn’t just found in photo albums or diaries; it’s buried in gigabytes of encrypted data. This is the haunting premise of , a point-and-click FMV thriller that tasks players with a grim professional responsibility: navigating the private digital life of a woman who is no longer here to explain it. The Role of a Digital Detective

: Two-thirds of the files are short clips recorded by Jessika, providing an intimate, often uncomfortable look at her declining mental state and the secrets she kept from her family.

: Your clients are Jessika’s grieving parents, who are desperate to understand their daughter's final moments. However, as the investigator, you may find that the truth is far more complicated—and darker—than anyone anticipated. Why It Resonates