Profile Perfect Level 123 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 3, 2026

Before we get into the full walkthrough, here is the final answer for Level 123. Save it if needed, then continue below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 123 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 123 Answer

I’ll show you the completed puzzle first, then walk through each logical step that leads to it.

SubjectWater ColorNearby LandscapeResidentVisitor TypesWater TemperatureDepth (m)
Lake APinkCityFrog / DragonflyGhostCold5
Lake BGreenFactoryLoch NessChildren / PhotographerCold25
Lake CGrayMountainSwanAlien / ScientistHot12
Lake DBlueMountainCrocodileCoupleMedium36
Lake EBrownBeachDuck / TurtlePainterCool42

Profile Perfect Level 123 Hints And Walkthrough

This puzzle revolves around five lakes, each with a water color, nearby landscape, resident, visitor types, water temperature, and depth. The initial answers lock in a few spots immediately, but the real challenge is connecting the neighbor clues and the hidden values – especially for Lake A’s resident and Lake E’s color. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock down the first direct clues

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Clue 1 tells us Lake A is the shallowest, so its depth is 5 m. Clue 2 says the gray lake has a depth of 12 m – that must be Lake C (since Lake A is already 5 and Lake E is the deepest later). So Lake C’s water color is gray and its depth is 12 m.

Clue 3: The lake visited by the photographer is near a factory. That gives us Lake B’s visitor as Photographer and its landscape as Factory. Clue 4: The lake near the beach has cool water. Lake E’s landscape is Beach (given as an initial answer), so Lake E’s water temperature is Cool.

At this point we have a solid foothold on depths, a couple of landscapes, and one visitor.

Step 2: Place the pink lake and the crocodile’s home

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Clue 9: The infamous pink lake is near the city. That makes Lake A pink and gives it a City landscape. Clue 10: Crocodiles live in the blue lake near a mountain. So Lake D is blue, its landscape is Mountain, and its resident is Crocodile. Two more lakes are now fully colored in terms of landscape and water color.

Step 3: Use the ghost and Loch Ness clues together

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Clue 11 says the pink lake is infamous not because of Loch Ness, but because of ghost visitors. That confirms Lake A’s visitor is Ghost. It also implies that Loch Ness is not in Lake A – that information becomes useful right away.

Clue 14: The 25‑m deep lake has reported Loch Ness sightings. The only lake without a depth yet is Lake B (A=5, C=12, D=36 later, E=42 later), so Lake B must be 25 m deep and its resident is Loch Ness. That sets Lake B’s depth and resident, and also tells us Lake D’s depth can’t be 25 (it’s 36 later) and Lake E’s depth is 42.

Step 4: Brown lake = deepest lake

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Clue 15 says the brown lake is the deepest around. The deepest depth is 42 m, which belongs to Lake E. So Lake E’s water color is Brown. This is a hidden value that the clue chain unlocks. Now we have all water colors except Lake B’s – we’ll fill that later by elimination.

Step 5: Work out the water temperatures

Clue 6: Lakes near a mountain are not cool or cold. Both Lake C and Lake D have Mountain landscapes, so their temperatures must be either Hot or Medium. Clue 18: Only couples visit the medium‑temperature lake. That tells us Lake D’s temperature is Medium (and its visitor is Couple). Therefore Lake C, the other mountain lake, must be Hot.

Clue 7: The shallowest lake (Lake A, depth 5) does not have hot water. So Lake A’s temperature is Cold. Clue 8: The lake near the factory (Lake B) is not medium temperature. The remaining temperatures are Cool (Lake E), Hot (Lake C), Medium (Lake D), and Cold (Lake A). Lake B cannot be Medium, so it has to be Cold. That gives us both Lake A and Lake B as Cold – the only two cold lakes in the puzzle.

Step 6: Swan and scientist, then alien

Clue 20: The scientist often checks the lake where swans live. That links Lake C’s resident to Swan and its visitor to Scientist. So Lake C now has resident Swan and visitor Scientist.

Clue 21: Aliens do not visit the lake with Loch Ness sightings. Since Lake B has Loch Ness, aliens cannot be there. The only lake left that doesn’t already have a visitor is Lake C (we already have Ghost in A, Photographer in B, Couple in D, Painter later in E). But Lake C still needs a second visitor – the solved grid shows Alien and Scientist together. So aliens visit Lake C, and the clue simply keeps them away from B.

Step 7: Frogs, turtles, and ducks

Hidden value: Lake A’s resident is Frog (given in the initial hidden values). That’s consistent with Clue 16, which says frogs are not found next to crocodiles – Lake A and Lake D aren’t neighbors in the order A‑B‑C‑D‑E, so that’s fine.

Clue 13: There’s a population of turtles in Lake A or Lake E. Since Lake A already has Frog (and Dragonfly later), the turtles must be in Lake E. So Lake E’s resident includes Turtle.

Clue 17: The painter often visits to draw scenery with ducks. That gives Lake E’s resident Duck (so Lake E has Duck/Turtle) and its visitor Painter.

Step 8: Fill in the remaining cells by elimination

We still need Lake B’s water color. The colors used so far are Pink (A), Gray (C), Blue (D), Brown (E). The only one left is Green, so Lake B’s water color is Green.

Lake B’s visitor is Photographer from Step 1, but the solved grid shows Children and Photographer together. The remaining visitor types after assigning Ghost (A), Alien/Scientist (C), Couple (D), Painter (E) is Children. So Lake B gets Children as its second visitor.

Lake A’s resident also gets Dragonfly – the puzzle shows Frog/Dragonfly. This comes from Clue 12, which says Duck and Dragonfly are not found in lakes near a mountain. Duck is in Lake E, Dragonfly must therefore be in a lake that isn’t near a mountain – Lake A (near City) fits perfectly.

Now every cell is accounted for, and all previous clues (like Clue 5 about the brown and gray lakes not being neighbors) check out because Lake E (Brown) and Lake C (Gray) have Lake D between them.


Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 123

The “not neighbors” clue (Clue 5)

“Brown lake is not neighbors with Gray lake” can trip you up if you don’t realize the lakes are in alphabetical order (A, B, C, D, E). Brown (E) and Gray (C) are separated by Lake D, so they’re not direct neighbors – the clue is satisfied. If you assumed a different order, you might try swapping landscapes or depths, but the puzzle expects the default sequence.

The deep lake / Loch Ness connection (Clue 14)

Clue 14 says the 25‑m deep lake has Loch Ness sightings. At first glance you might think any lake could be 25 m, but the shallowest (Lake A) and the gray lake (Lake C) already have their depths locked in. Combined with the later clue that brown is the deepest (42 m), the only candidate left is Lake B. It’s a straightforward elimination, but players sometimes forget to use the earlier depth placements.

Aliens and the Loch Ness lake (Clue 21)

“Aliens do not visit the lake with Loch Ness sightings” seems to only rule out Lake B. But because Lake C already has Scientist from Clue 20, the only logical home for the aliens is also Lake C – the solved grid puts them together. The trick is recognizing that the alien visitor isn’t forced to go elsewhere; it simply can’t go to B. The rest is solved by elimination of the remaining visitor types.


Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 123 is a satisfying logic puzzle that rewards careful elimination and paying attention to the order of the lakes. The initial answers give you a few easy footholds, but the temperature and neighbor clues require you to track which values are already taken. Once you place the brown lake as the deepest and work through the medium‑temperature clue, the rest falls into place quickly. The split‑value cells (like Frog/Dragonfly and Children/Photographer) are just the puzzle’s way of saying multiple residents or visitors can occupy the same lake – no need to pick one over the other. Happy solving!

Need help with another level later? Save the level walkthrough index so you can return whenever you need the answer. If you have feedback or ideas, share them in the comments. Good luck and enjoy the puzzle!

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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