Profile Perfect Level 129 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 3, 2026

The final solution for Level 129 comes first for easy saving. Then, I'll walk through the solving process in order. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 129 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 129 Answer

Here's the solved grid for Profile Perfect Level 129. I'll walk through each clue below so you can see exactly how everything locks in.

SubjectShapeColorResident
Coral ABranchRedClownfish
Coral BTableBlueSeahorse
Coral CBrainGreenShrimp
Coral DTubeYellowJellyfish

Profile Perfect Level 129 Hints And Walkthrough

This puzzle deals with four corals (A through D) and three traits: shape, color, and resident. No starting answers are given, so every clue matters from the beginning. The good news is that several clues link directly to specific cells, giving us a quick foothold. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock Coral C’s shape from the opening clue

screenshot

The very first clue tells us that Coral C looks like a brain. That’s a direct placement – no interpretation needed. So we can immediately write “Brain” for Coral C’s shape. This is our anchor point because several later clues will refer back to the Brain coral.

Step 2: Use the “Brain coral and its neighbors” color clue

screenshot

Clue 2 says that the Brain coral and its neighbors are not Red. Since Coral C is the Brain coral, its neighbors are Coral B (to the left) and Coral D (to the right). That means Coral B, Coral C, and Coral D cannot be Red. The only coral left is Coral A, so Coral A must be Red. This gives us Coral A’s color right away.

Step 3: Place the right half’s colors – Green and Yellow

screenshot

Clue 4 tells us that the right half contains Yellow and Green coral. The right half of the lineup (positions C and D) consists of Coral C and Coral D. So one of them is Yellow and the other is Green. The same clue also directly links those colors: Coral C gets Green, Coral D gets Yellow. That settles both, and it also reconfirms Coral A is Red (already known). Now we know three of the four colors. The only color left is Blue, so Coral B must be Blue.

Step 4: The Blue coral houses the Seahorse

screenshot

Clue 5 says the Seahorse lives in the Blue coral. We just determined that Coral B is Blue, so Coral B’s resident is Seahorse. This also confirms that Coral B’s color is indeed Blue (a nice double-check).

Step 5: Position Jellyfish to the right of Brain coral

Clue 3 states that Jellyfish is on the right of the Brain coral. Since the Brain coral is Coral C, whatever is directly to its right is Coral D. So Coral D’s resident is Jellyfish. This matches perfectly with the color we already assigned to Coral D (Yellow).

Step 6: Use the neighbor count to assign the remaining residents

Clue 6 says that Shrimp has more neighbors than Clownfish. To figure this out, we need the coral order: A, B, C, D. Coral A (the leftmost) has only one neighbor (B). Coral B has two neighbors (A and C). Coral C has two neighbors (B and D). Coral D has only one neighbor (C). “More neighbors” means the resident with two neighbors (Shrimp) lives in either B or C, and the resident with one neighbor (Clownfish) lives in either A or D. But we already know Coral B’s resident is Seahorse, and Coral D’s resident is Jellyfish. So Shrimp cannot be in B or D. That leaves Coral C as the only candidate for Shrimp (two neighbors), and Coral A as the only candidate for Clownfish (one neighbor). So Coral C’s resident is Shrimp, and Coral A’s resident is Clownfish. This completes all residents.

Step 7: Identify Tube coral by its Yellow color

Clue 7 says Tube coral is colored Yellow. We already know Yellow belongs to Coral D. Therefore Coral D’s shape is Tube. This clue also reconfirms Coral A’s resident (Clownfish) and Coral C’s resident (Shrimp), but those are already placed.

Step 8: Confirm Branch coral from the distance clue

Clue 8 says Branch coral is 2 columns apart from the Green one. The Green coral is Coral C (at position 3). “2 columns apart” means the other coral is either position 1 (Coral A) or position 5 (which doesn’t exist). So Branch must be Coral A. That gives us Coral A’s shape as Branch. The only shape left is Table, which goes to Coral B. All shapes are now filled: Coral A Branch, Coral B Table, Coral C Brain, Coral D Tube.

Solution: The grid is complete

After those eight clues, every cell is locked in. The solved grid matches exactly what we have in the answer table above. No hidden values, no leftover ambiguity – just a clean, step-by-step deduction.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 129

Even though this level is relatively straightforward, a couple of clues can trip you up if you’re not careful about reading the relationships.

Clue 2: “Brain coral and its neighbors are not Red”

The tricky part here is realizing that “Brain coral” refers to Coral C (from clue 1), not to some unknown coral. Also, “neighbors” means the corals immediately left and right. Some players might think “neighbors” includes all corals in the same half, but the geometry of the grid is linear – left and right only. Once you interpret it correctly, it cleanly eliminates three corals from being Red, leaving Coral A as the only option.

Clue 6: “Shrimp has more neighbors than Clownfish”

This clue doesn’t tell you where Shrimp or Clownfish are – it tells you a relationship about their positions. You have to know the order of corals (A, B, C, D) and count neighbors. The confusion often comes from forgetting that the ends have only one neighbor. Once you realize that Shrimp must be in a middle coral (B or C) and Clownfish at an end (A or D), and then combine with the already-known residents (Seahorse in B, Jellyfish in D), the solution becomes clear.

Clue 8: “Branch coral is 2 columns apart from the Green one”

This one is easy to misread as “two columns to the right” or “two columns to the left.” The phrase “2 columns apart” means the difference in column index is exactly 2. Since the Green coral is at position 3, the only other coral that is 2 apart is at position 1 (Coral A). Some players might think position 5 or try to count gaps differently, but in a four-column grid, it’s a simple subtraction.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 129 is a great example of how a few direct placements can cascade into a full grid. The key is to start with the named coral (Brain) and then let the color and neighbor clues unfold naturally. Once you have the colors, the residents follow quickly, and the shapes wrap up the rest. No slash-separated values or hidden features here – just clean, logical linking. If you found yourself stuck, hopefully this walkthrough made the path clear. Happy puzzling!

Solving more Profile Perfect levels? Bookmark the complete level answer list for quick access next time. If you have any thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments. 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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