Visual Assets
8 screenshotsStore Profile
Identity
- Publisher
- Lion Studios Plus
Market Signals
- US top grossing
- 59
- US top free
- 29
- Downloads
- 1M
- Rating
- 4.5
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| platform identifier | com.luwukmeliana.profileperfect |
|---|---|
| Store title | Profile Perfect |
| Publisher | Lion Studios Plus |
| version | 0.9.0 |
| rating average | 4.47 |
| rating display | 4.5 |
| rating count | 8251 |
| downloads bucket | 1M+ |
| store category | Puzzle |
| content rating | Medium Maturity |
| paid | false |
| price | Free |
| updated on | 2026-06-10 |
| whats new | {"notes":[],"version":"0.9.0"} |
| US top free | 29 |
| US top grossing | 59 |
| Download estimate | 1M |
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No exact-game UA creatives found.
Profile Perfect appears to be a deduction-grid puzzle where the player reads clues, assigns traits to suspects or profiles, receives correctness feedback, and solves the case to unlock the next level.
Profile Perfect is a clear deduction-grid puzzle, but the key risk is whether clue complexity can scale without turning lives-based feedback into punishment for reasoning.
Profile Perfect has clear deduction depth if clues combine direct, relational, exclusion, and multi-step constraints. Its biggest compression risk is a lives system that punishes hypothesis testing without explaining contradictions.
15 of 15 responses include lens metadata.

This sample values pause-friendly short sessions and clear goals, while being less motivated by cosmetic style or long-term systems.
I would probably try Profile Perfect if I wanted something easy to pause between family or work interruptions. The profile puzzle setup sounds simple enough to play for a few minutes without remembering a lot of systems. I am less drawn to it for style or customization, and I would not want any pressure to keep a streak going. The store page looks clean and bright, which makes it seem easier to pick up than a busy management game.
This sample values pause-friendly short sessions and clear goals, while being less motivated by cosmetic style or long-term systems.I like that it seems easy to start, stop, and understand quickly.
I would dislike streak pressure, interruptions, or too much ad friction.
The clean bright presentation suggests the game would be easy to read in short sessions.
I would try Profile Perfect, but more as a solo puzzle game than something I would compare with friends. The profile-solving idea sounds like it could give me a satisfying run of levels, and the strong rating makes it seem reasonably polished. I would be less interested if it is just bright prompts with no harder challenges or fair scoring. The store art looks lively and easy to read, which helps me believe I could jump in without a long tutorial.
This sample sees enough polish and level progression for a trial, but the lack of visible social or competitive hooks limits enthusiasm.I like the promise of clear puzzle progress and a polished casual experience.
I do not see much friendly competition or long-term challenge from the store evidence.
The bright visuals look readable and approachable rather than demanding.
I would probably download Profile Perfect for a calm evening puzzle, especially because the store rating and download count suggest it is not a broken or empty app. The investigation angle sounds more interesting than a basic tapper, and I like games where I can finish a few levels and feel done. My main concern is that it is free with ads, so I would need the interruptions to stay reasonable. The store images look simple and readable enough, which makes it seem more relaxing than frantic.
This sample responds well to readable puzzle routine and trusted store performance, with ad interruption as the main risk.I like that it appears to offer quick, understandable puzzle progress.
I would dislike frequent ads or pop-ups breaking the calm pace.
The store visuals look clean enough for relaxed problem solving.
I would consider installing Profile Perfect, but I would check very quickly whether there is a fair ad-free option. The game looks like a straightforward casual puzzle with enough popularity to trust, and that is usually fine if it respects my time. I am not interested in daily-login pressure or bundles that make the game feel like work. The store presentation is bright and readable, which gives me more confidence than a cluttered page would.
This sample has moderate install intent because the game looks trustworthy and clear, but spending willingness depends on honest value and low ad friction.I like that it looks popular, polished, and simple to understand.
I would be put off by daily pressure, unclear offers, or too many ads.
The bright listing looks readable and less cluttered than many free puzzle games.
I might install Profile Perfect for a short break, but I am not expecting much strategy from it. The investigation logic premise could be enjoyable if the choices actually matter and the levels build on each other. My concern is that it may be more of a quick ad-supported time killer than a game with meaningful decisions. The store visuals look clean and simple, which is good for starting quickly, but I would need more than that to stay.
This sample is open to a quick trial but needs meaningful logic progression and would churn if the loop is too shallow or ad-heavy.I like that the premise could offer simple deduction without a big time commitment.
I worry it may be too shallow and interrupted by ads.
The store visuals appear clean enough to understand quickly.

This sample likes gentle level completion but is less motivated by the theme because the evidence points to casual logic puzzles rather than cozy collection or self-expression.
I might install Profile Perfect if I wanted a light puzzle game after a long day, but it does not look like my usual cozy collection game. The idea of figuring out profiles could be satisfying if levels give me a clean little win without making me grind. What holds me back is the free-with-ads setup, because a calm puzzle loop gets annoying fast if every mistake or level ends in an ad. The store visuals look polished and colorful, but I do not see enough comfort, customization, or collection appeal to make it a must-download for me.
This sample likes gentle level completion but is less motivated by the theme because the evidence points to casual logic puzzles rather than cozy collection or self-expression.I like the possibility of simple satisfying puzzle wins.
I do not see much cozy progression or collection value, and ads could ruin the mood.
The colorful store images look friendly, but not especially warm or personal.
I would download this only if I needed a quick bus-stop game, because the profile puzzle hook sounds fast and low commitment. The high rating and million-plus downloads make it feel safe enough to test without overthinking. I am not expecting a deep game, and the free ad model is the biggest reason I might bounce after one session. The store images look flashy and readable, which helps, but I would need the first few puzzles to start immediately.
This sample values fast onboarding and lightweight play, with social proof helping install intent and ad tolerance remaining limited.I like that it looks easy to start and popular enough to trust for a quick test.
I would drop it quickly if ads or slow setup interrupt the first session.
The bright visuals make it look more like a fast casual puzzle than a complicated mystery game.
I would be curious enough to install Profile Perfect once, because the idea of solving personality or profile puzzles is a little more specific than another plain match game. If the cases have clever twists, I could see myself enjoying the level-to-level progress. My hesitation is that it may still be a very standard ad-supported casual loop with shallow choices. The store presentation looks clean and puzzle-focused, but I do not yet see a strong visual identity that makes it feel indie or surprising.
This sample is pulled in by the unusual investigation-profile premise but remains skeptical about originality and monetization depth.I like that the profile puzzle idea has a clearer hook than many casual puzzlers.
I worry the loop may be shallow and built mostly around ad-supported levels.
The store presentation looks clear, but not especially distinctive.
I would probably skip Profile Perfect unless I heard the puzzles get genuinely tricky. The store page makes it look like a clean one-thumb casual puzzle, which is fine for zoning out but not really what I chase for mastery. I like that the rating is strong, so it probably delivers what it promises, but I do not see competition, rankings, or a skill ceiling from the evidence here. If there were any subscription-style pressure or constant purchases, that would make it an easy uninstall for me.
This sample has low interest because the game appears casual and relaxing rather than competitive or mastery-driven, despite decent trust from ratings.I like that it seems polished and easy to play with one hand.
I do not see enough depth, competition, or earned mastery to pull me in.
The visuals make it look accessible, but also very casual.
I would probably download Profile Perfect for a quick try, mostly because a detective-profile puzzle sounds easy to understand in one look. The 1M+ downloads and strong rating make it feel less like a random throwaway app, and I could see it working in short waiting-around sessions. My worry is that a free puzzle game from a casual publisher may lean hard on ads or daily pressure once I am a few levels in. The store images look bright and simple enough that I would know what I am tapping before installing, which matters if I am deciding fast.
This sample is drawn toward quick social proof and simple session fit, with caution around free-to-play interruption and whether the concept feels fresh enough to keep attention.I like that it looks popular, quick to understand, and easy to sample without a big commitment.
I worry the free model could mean too many interruptions once I am playing.
The bright store art makes the puzzle premise look immediately readable.

This sample has lower intent because the theme is less familiar and visual clutter is a concern, though strong social proof leaves a path to trial.
I would probably skip Profile Perfect at first because I prefer puzzles with familiar rules like cards, boards, words, or tiles. The profile-solving theme may be interesting, but I would need very clear instructions before I felt comfortable. The high rating makes me less skeptical, so I might try it if a family member recommended it. The store visuals look bright and busy enough that I would want to be sure the play screen is not cluttered or full of tiny icons.
This sample has lower intent because the theme is less familiar and visual clutter is a concern, though strong social proof leaves a path to trial.I like that many players seem to rate it well.
I am unsure whether the rules will be familiar and whether ads or clutter will get in the way.
The bright presentation makes me cautious about clutter and small icons.
I would try Profile Perfect because a clear puzzle about solving profiles sounds like a nice daily brain exercise. The store numbers make me think it has enough polish to be worth a look, and I like games where I can complete a few levels without rushing. I would be bothered if the game makes me watch ads just to continue or if the answer choices feel unfair. The visuals seem simple and tap-friendly, which helps me feel I could understand the rules quickly.
This sample fits the puzzle routine well, with positive intent tempered by concern over ad-based continuation and fairness of logic.I like the promise of calm, understandable puzzle levels.
I would dislike being pushed into ads to continue or recover from mistakes.
The store visuals suggest simple tap-based play that should be easy to follow.
I would probably not rush to download Profile Perfect, though I might try it if I wanted a very light thinking game. The investigation idea interests me only if there is gentle planning and not just obvious tapping. I am wary of anything that adds subscriptions or complicated offers to a simple puzzle game. The store images look easy enough to tap through, but they do not show me much depth or careful strategy.
This sample needs meaningful but simple planning and is cautious because the evidence points more to casual puzzle play than strategic depth.I like that the premise could involve light deduction.
I do not see enough planning depth, and I would be wary of unclear paid offers.
The visuals look tap-friendly but not especially strategic.
I would only download Profile Perfect if I could keep the ads under control. The puzzle idea sounds pleasant enough, and the high rating gives me some trust that people are enjoying it. Still, free games with ads and purchases can become tiring if they interrupt every level or hide the calm parts behind prompts. The store art is bright and cheerful, but I would prefer it to stay peaceful rather than flashy once I am playing.
This sample's install decision depends heavily on trust and ad control, with moderate interest in the puzzle premise and concern about visual noise.I like that the game seems popular and has a simple puzzle premise.
I would dislike forced ads or unclear purchases in a relaxation game.
The bright art looks cheerful, but it could feel too busy if overused.
I might download Profile Perfect on a tablet if the puzzles are calm and the buttons are large enough. The strong rating and large number of downloads make it feel more trustworthy than many new free games. I am cautious because bright casual games can sometimes become noisy or push too many ads. The store images look colorful and easy to follow at a glance, but I would need the actual play screen to stay clear and not rushed.
This sample is cautiously positive due to trust and simple puzzle fit, with readability, calm pacing, and ad restraint as decisive factors.I like that it appears popular and simple enough to understand.
I worry it could become too noisy or ad-heavy for relaxed tablet play.
The colorful visuals look approachable, though I would want them to remain uncluttered while playing.
1 of 3 segments score this higher than the current game.