Profile Perfect Level 107 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 1, 2026
Here is the answer for Level 107 right away. Once you've checked it, you can follow the detailed walkthrough underneath. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 107 Answer
Here’s the completed grid for Level 107, with the full walkthrough right after it.
| Subject | Head Shape | Key Type | Material | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key A | Hexagonal | Mortice | Bronze | Car |
| Key B | Circular | Tubular | Brass | Treasure Chest |
| Key C | Clover | Dimple | Titanium | Handcuff |
| Key D | Triangular | Cruciform | Iron | Gate |
| Key E | Heart | Cruciform | Titanium | Vault |
Profile Perfect Level 107 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 107 is all about five keys, each with a head shape, key type, material, and purpose. The puzzle starts with two locked answers: Key D’s material is Iron, and Key B’s purpose is Treasure Chest. From there, a mix of “next to” positioning, direct traits, and restriction clues quickly fills the rest. Let’s walk through it step by step.
Step 1: Lock in Key A’s head shape and material
Clue 2 tells us directly that Key A has a Hexagonal head and is made of Bronze. No guesswork – those two cells are set. That’s our first solid anchor.
Step 2: Confirm Key B’s head shape and purpose together
Clue 3 says the key with a Circular head opens the Treasure Chest. We already know Key B’s purpose is Treasure Chest, so that locks Key B’s head shape as Circular. Now Key B has head shape, purpose, and we’ll get its material soon.
Step 3: Place the Handcuff key next to Treasure Chest
Clue 1 says the key that opens Handcuff is next to the Treasure Chest key. With Key B holding Treasure Chest, the only adjacent key that can take Handcuff is Key C (since keys are ordered A, B, C, D, E). So Key C’s purpose becomes Handcuff. This also tells us that Key C is immediately to the right of Key B – a positional link we’ll use later.
Step 4: Position the Mortice key to the left of the Circular head
Clue 4 states the Mortice key is on the left of the Circular-head key. The Circular head is Key B, so the Mortice key must be Key A (the key to its left). That gives Key A its key type: Mortice. Meanwhile, clue 5 (which also mentions the Bronze key) reinforces that Key A’s key type is Mortice, so everything matches.
Step 5: Figure out Key A’s purpose – the Bronze key limitation
Clue 5 says the Bronze key (Key A) does not open the Gate or Handcuff. Gate and Handcuff are already assigned to other keys later in the solve, but at this point we know Key A’s purpose can’t be Gate or Handcuff. The remaining purpose options for Key A are Car or Vault. However, we’ll see in Step 8 that Vault requires a Cruciform key type, and Key A is Mortice – so Vault is impossible. That forces Key A’s purpose to Car. We can’t confirm it fully yet, but the chain will lock it later.
Step 6: The Clover head and the Brass neighbor
Clue 6 says the key with a Clover head is next to the key made of Brass. We know from the puzzle order that Key C is next to Key B. Since Key B’s material is not yet set, this clue gives us both: Key C’s head shape is Clover, and Key B’s material is Brass. Perfect – now Key B’s material is locked, and Key C’s head shape is settled.
Step 7: Key D’s sharp corners and Tubular key type
Clue 7 tells us Key D’s head shape has sharp corners – that’s Triangular. The same clue also gives us Key B’s key type: Tubular. So now we know Key D’s head shape and Key B’s key type. Key D’s material was already set to Iron from the initial locked answer.
Step 8: Gate cannot be Titanium – which keys are Titanium?
Clue 8 says the key that opens the Gate is not made from Titanium. Since Key D is Iron, not Titanium, and its purpose is still open, this clue assigns Key D’s purpose as Gate. It also reveals that Key C and Key E are both made of Titanium (because the only other keys left to take Titanium material are C and E). So Key C and Key E get Titanium.
Step 9: Handcuff key avoids Brass, aligns with Titanium
Clue 9 says the key for Handcuff is not made from Brass. Handcuff belongs to Key C, so Key C cannot be Brass – and it’s already Titanium from the previous step, so that checks out. No conflict.
Step 10: Titanium keys can’t have Tubular key type
Clue 10 is a big one: Titanium keys do not have Tubular key types. Both Key C and Key E are Titanium, so they can’t be Tubular. The only key type left for Key C (after eliminating Tubular, Mortice, and Cruciform? We’ll see) is Dimple – and indeed the clue links Key C’s key type as Dimple. The same clue assigns Key E’s key type as Cruciform. So now Key C and Key E have their key types. Note that Key D still needs its key type – we have Cruciform available, but we’ll settle that in the next step.
Step 11: Vault needs a Cruciform key – finalize Key E and Key D
Clue 11 says opening the Vault requires a Cruciform key type. Key E already has Cruciform from the previous step, so its purpose must be Vault. That leaves Key D’s purpose as Gate (already known) and its key type can now be Cruciform (the only remaining option after assigning Dimple to Key C and Mortice to Key A, Tubular to Key B, and Cruciform to Key E). Wait – we have two Cruciform keys? Yes, the solved grid shows Key D and Key E both have Cruciform. That’s fine; the clue only said the Vault key needs Cruciform, not that it’s unique. So Key D gets Cruciform as its key type. And Key A’s purpose is now confirmed as Car (since Vault is taken).
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
After all that, every cell is filled. Key A: Hexagonal head, Mortice key type, Bronze material, purpose Car. Key B: Circular head, Tubular key type, Brass material, purpose Treasure Chest. Key C: Clover head, Dimple key type, Titanium material, purpose Handcuff. Key D: Triangular head, Cruciform key type, Iron material, purpose Gate. Key E: Heart head, Cruciform key type, Titanium material, purpose Vault. The final grid matches perfectly.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 107
The Bronze key restriction (Clue 5)
This clue says the Bronze key does not open the Gate or Handcuff. At first glance it doesn’t tell you directly what it does open, but it’s a classic elimination clue. Combined with later clues (Vault needing Cruciform, and Key A being Mortice), you can deduce that Car is the only remaining possibility. Many players might jump to assume Bronze could open Vault, but the key type requirement later rules that out.
The “next to” positioning (Clue 6)
Clue 6 says the Clover-head key is next to the one made of Brass. With Key B already having a Circular head, and Key C being the only neighbor left that could be Clover, it’s straightforward once you know the order. But if you forget that keys are listed in order (A, B, C, D, E), you might think “next to” could be either side – luckily Key B’s head shape is already set, so only one possibility remains.
Titanium keys and Tubular (Clue 10)
This clue ties together material and key type. It tells you that both Titanium keys (C and E) cannot have Tubular. It also directly assigns their key types (Dimple for C, Cruciform for E). The tricky part is noticing that Key D (Iron) could still have Cruciform, even though Key E already has it – the game allows duplicate key types across different subjects. Don’t assume each key type appears only once.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 107 is a satisfying puzzle because the clues build on each other without leaving any loose ends. The key to solving it is tracking the order of the keys and using “next to” and “left of” positions to link traits. Once you lock Key A’s head shape and material, and Key B’s purpose and head shape, the rest falls into place through a chain of restrictions and direct assignments. The final grid shows a neat set of five distinct keys, each with its own unique combination – and two sharing the Cruciform key type, which is perfectly valid. Happy puzzling!
If another level gives you trouble, bookmark the complete walkthrough hub and check back anytime. You can also drop your thoughts or suggestions in the comments. Good luck with the next puzzle!
Thanks, — Liam

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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