Profile Perfect Level 104 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 1, 2026

Below is the complete final answer for Level 104. Once you've checked it, continue to the step-by-step guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 104 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 104 Answer

Here’s the completed grid for Level 104 – get the full solution first, then I’ll walk you through how each clue locks it all in.

SubjectRoof TypePaintWindowExterior
House ASkillionBlackSlidingBird Bath
House BGable RoofBrownBayMailbox / Chimney
House CFlatBlueDormerFence / Flag
House DMansardYellowCircularLamp Post

Profile Perfect Level 104 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 104 gives you two locked answers right away: House C’s roof is Flat, and House B’s window is Bay. That’s a solid start, but the rest of the puzzle relies heavily on position clues and pairing colors with exteriors – plus a couple of slash-separated cells that hold two values each. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Use the initial answers to place the first windows and colors

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The first three clues are marked as “initial,” meaning they give us direct placements. Clue 2 tells us House D is Yellow and has a trapezoid roof – that’s a Mansard roof. So House D’s paint is Yellow and its roof is Mansard. Clue 3 says “2 exteriors are between Dormer and Sliding windows,” which in this puzzle translates to House A having a Sliding window and House C having a Dormer window. So I lock those in: House A Window = Sliding, House C Window = Dormer. Clue 1 says the house on the left of the Bay window (House B) is the darkest – that’s House A, painted Black. So House A Paint = Black. Already we have four cells filled.

Step 2: Compare roof sections to assign remaining roof types

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Clue 4 compares roof sections: House B’s roof has more sections than House A’s. A Skillion roof is a single slope, a Gable roof has two slopes, and a Mansard has four (two on each side). That means House A must be Skillion, House B must be Gable Roof, and House D is already Mansard. House C’s roof is already Flat from the initial answer, so all roof types are settled.

Step 3: Connect the blue house with the Flag and the Circular window

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Clue 5 says “Either Blue or Yellow house has a Flag.” The clue also links House C Paint = Blue and House C Exterior = Flag. That confirms House C is painted Blue and it has a Flag in its exterior. (Note that House C’s exterior cell later will contain a second value, Fence, but for now we know Flag is one of them.) Clue 6 then says “Flag is next to Circular window house.” The Flag belongs to House C, so the Circular window must be in the house next to it – either House B or House D. But clue 6 also directly links House D Window = Circular. So House D gets a Circular window. Perfect.

Step 4: Sliding window house gets only one exterior

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Clue 7 says the Sliding window house (House A) has only a Bird Bath exterior. That directly gives House A Exterior = Bird Bath. It also mentions House C Exterior = Flag, which we already have. So House A’s exterior is locked in.

Step 5: Place Chimney to the left of the Dormer window house

The Dormer window house is House C. Clue 8 says “Chimney is on the left of Dormer window house.” Left means the house immediately before House C, which is House B. So House B has Chimney in its exterior cell. That’s one of the two slash-separated values for House B (the other will be Mailbox).

Step 6: Use the “2 columns apart” clue to place Mailbox and Lamp Post

Clue 9 says Mailbox and Lamp Post are 2 columns apart. “Columns” here means houses in order from left to right (A, B, C, D). Two columns apart means there are two houses between them – so the only pair that fits is House B and House D (since B to D skips C). The clue links House B Exterior = Mailbox and House D Exterior = Lamp Post, and also mentions House D Paint = Yellow (already known). So House B gets Mailbox (making its exterior Mailbox / Chimney) and House D gets Lamp Post.

Step 7: Brown house cannot have Lamp Post – fills in paint and the remaining exterior

Clue 10 says “Brown house does not have a Lamp Post.” The clue then links several cells: House B Paint = Brown, House B Exterior = Mailbox and Chimney, plus House C Exterior = Fence and Flag. So this does two things: it confirms that House B is painted Brown, and it reveals that House C’s second exterior value is Fence (since the clue specifically lists Fence for House C). Now House C Exterior becomes Fence / Flag – exactly as shown in the solved grid.

All four houses are completely filled. Let’s double-check: House A has Black paint, Skillion roof, Sliding window, Bird Bath exterior. House B has Brown paint, Gable roof, Bay window, and two exteriors (Mailbox and Chimney). House C has Blue paint, Flat roof, Dormer window, and two exteriors (Fence and Flag). House D has Yellow paint, Mansard roof, Circular window, and Lamp Post exterior. That matches the initial grid perfectly.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

There’s nothing left to fill – every cell is accounted for. The puzzle uses initial clues for direct hits, a roof-section comparison, a pair of either/or and neighbor clues, and a positional distance clue to tie everything together. The slash-separated cells are handled naturally: House B gets both Mailbox and Chimney, House C gets both Fence and Flag. No hidden values this time, so it’s all straightforward once you follow the chain.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 104

Clue 5: “Either Blue or Yellow house has a Flag”

This clue might seem like an either/or choice that you have to solve later, but the clue actually links directly to House C being Blue and having the Flag. If you read the clue’s linked cells, it gives the answer immediately – it’s not a puzzle to deduce, it’s a direct placement. The phrase “either … or” is a red herring if you don’t check what the clue supports.

Clue 9: “Mailbox and Lamp Post are 2 columns apart”

“Columns” here refers to the house positions in order. Two columns apart means exactly two houses between them. Some players might think it means two houses away (like with one house in between), but the puzzle’s logic treats “apart” as the number of steps. With four houses in a row, the only pair that satisfies that is House B and House D (B to D skips C, which is one house between, but “2 columns apart” means the difference in indices is 2? Actually if columns are positions 1,2,3,4, then positions 2 and 4 are two apart – that fits. It’s a small wording nuance that can trip you up, but the clue’s linked cells spell it out: House B gets Mailbox and House D gets Lamp Post.

Clue 10: “Brown house does not have a Lamp Post”

On its own, this clue only tells us the Brown house can’t have a Lamp Post. But because we already placed Lamp Post at House D, it indirectly means House D cannot be Brown – and since we already know House D is Yellow, that’s consistent. However, the real value of this clue is that it confirms House B’s paint is Brown and also fills House C’s second exterior (Fence). Many players might skip over the linked cells and miss that it directly gives us House B Paint = Brown.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 104 is a clean, logical puzzle where most placements come from direct clues, but the slash-separated exteriors (Mailbox/Chimney and Fence/Flag) require you to pay attention to how clues assign multiple values to the same cell. The roof-section clue and the distance clue are the two main “thinking” steps, while everything else falls into place quickly. If you take each clue’s linked cells at face value and remember that a slash means both values belong to that subject, the solve is smooth and satisfying.

Stuck on a future level? Bookmark the full Profile Perfect guide and come back anytime for the answer. And if you have thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments, we’d love to hear from you. Good luck and have fun!

Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone avatar

Liam Stone

Liam Stone has played Profile Perfect since the app first launched on the Apple App Store. He spotted its potential early, and that early bet turned into hundreds of hours spent solving levels, testing clue logic, and documenting answers for other players. Liam runs the YouTube channel Puzzle Game Answer where his puzzle walkthroughs have earned over 935,000 views and a growing community of more than 800 subscribers. He covers a wide range of mobile puzzle games beyond Profile Perfect, giving him firsthand experience with how these games design clues, structure levels, and trip up even experienced players. Every guide on this site reflects that hands on experience. Liam plays each level himself, verifies every answer against the in game grid, and rewrites confusing clues into plain language so you don't need to guess. If you want more of his walkthroughs, subscribe to his channel.

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