Profile Perfect Level 137 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 4, 2026
Below is the saved-answer section for Level 137. After that, I'll show you how to solve it from start to finish. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 137 Answer
Here’s the final solved grid, and I’ll walk through how each clue locks it in afterward.
| Subject | Wall | Floor | Table | Props |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Room A | Glass | Carpet | Rectangle | TV / Mic |
| Room B | Floral | Wood | U-Shape | Projector |
| Room C | Striped | Ceramic | Round | Whiteboard / Phone |
Profile Perfect Level 137 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 137 gives us three meeting rooms (A, B, and C) and four traits to match: wall type, floor material, table shape, and props. Right away you’ll notice that two rooms have multiple props separated by a slash — Room A gets a TV and a Mic, and Room C gets a Whiteboard and a Phone. No initial answers are locked, so we start fresh with the clues. Let’s work through them step by step.
Step 1: Lock Room A’s table shape from the sharp‑corners clue
Clue 2 says the table in meeting room A has four sharp corners. A rectangle table fits that description perfectly. So Room A’s table is Rectangle. That’s a direct placement we can mark immediately.
Step 2: Use the “multiple props” clue to nail Room B’s wall
Clue 1 tells us that rooms with Glass and Striped walls have multiple props. That means the room with a Glass wall (which will be either Room A or C) and the room with a Striped wall (the other one) both end up with more than one prop. The clue also links Room B’s wall as Floral — because if Glass and Striped are taken, the only remaining wall type for Room B is Floral. So we set Room B’s wall to Floral.
Step 3: The Floral room’s floor isn’t Carpet
Clue 4 says the Floral meeting room (Room B) is not using Carpet on its floor. That leaves Wood and Ceramic as possibilities. Since we haven’t placed floors yet, we can’t finish it here, but it’s a small restriction. Hang on — the next clue will tighten things.
Step 4: Phone in Room C means a Ceramic floor
Clue 3 directly tells us one of Room C’s props is a Conference Phone. Clue 6 then adds that the meeting room with a Phone has a Ceramic floor. So Room C’s floor is Ceramic, and we know Room C holds a Phone. This also eliminates Ceramic as an option for any other room.
Now back to Clue 4: Room B’s floor cannot be Carpet, and Ceramic is already taken. The only remaining floor type is Wood, so Room B’s floor is Wood. Two floors are set.
Step 5: The CEO’s rule locks Room C’s wall and table
Clue 7 says the CEOs forbid using a Glass wall with a Round table. That means the room that has a Round table cannot have a Glass wall. The clue links directly: Room C’s wall is Striped and Room C’s table is Round. This makes sense — if Glass were paired with Round, it would be forbidden, so the only way to place Round is with Striped. Now Room C is mostly filled: wall Striped, floor Ceramic, table Round, and props will include Phone (and later Whiteboard).
Step 6: The TV is farthest from the Round table
Clue 8 tells us the TV prop is the farthest from the Round table. Since the Round table is in Room C, the farthest room would be Room A (assuming the rooms are arranged in order A, B, C). That gives us Room A’s props include TV. And because Room A has multiple props (remember from Clue 1, it has a Glass wall, so it must have more than one prop), we already know Room A’s wall is Glass — the only wall left after Room B got Floral and Room C got Striped. So Room A’s wall is Glass, and its props include TV. The other prop for Room A will come soon.
Step 7: No Projector or Whiteboard in Room A
Clue 9 states that neither a Projector nor a Whiteboard is in meeting room A. So Room A cannot have those as props. We already have TV in Room A, and the only remaining prop type is Mic (since TV, Phone, Whiteboard, Projector, and Mic are the five props, and the slash cells show Room A gets two). So Room A’s second prop is Mic. This also means the Projector must go to Room B, and the Whiteboard goes to Room C (along with the Phone). Clue 5 confirms this: “The Phone neighbors a U‑Shaped table next to the Whiteboard.” The linked cells assign Room B’s table as U‑Shape, Room C’s props as Whiteboard, and Room C’s props as Phone. So everything matches.
Step 8: Finish the remaining cells
Now the grid is almost complete. Let’s check what’s left:
- Room A floor: The only floor not used is Carpet (Room B has Wood, Room C has Ceramic). So Room A’s floor is Carpet.
- Room B table: Already set to U‑Shape from Clue 5.
- Room B props: The only prop left after assigning TV/Mic to Room A and Whiteboard/Phone to Room C is Projector.
- Room C props: Whiteboard and Phone, as linked.
All cells are filled. The solved grid matches perfectly.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 137
Clue 1: “Rooms with Glass and Striped walls have multiple props”
This one can trip you up because it’s phrased as a general statement, but it also locks a specific value for Room B’s wall. New players might think the clue only tells you that two rooms have multiple props, not that it forces Room B to be Floral. The key is to realize that if Glass and Striped are the two walls that host multiple props, and there are only three rooms, the third room must have the remaining wall type — Floral. That’s a direct assignment hidden inside a descriptive clue.
Clue 5: “The Phone neighbors a U‑Shaped table next to the Whiteboard”
This clue looks like a positional relationship, but in a three‑room puzzle without an explicit ordering, “neighbors” and “next to” can be confusing. The actual linked cells just assign the Phone and Whiteboard to Room C and the U‑Shaped table to Room B. The wording is there to imply that the Phone and Whiteboard are in the same room (since they’re next to each other), and that room is adjacent to the U‑Shaped table room. In this linear arrangement (A‑B‑C), Room C is next to Room B, so it works. Ignore the spatial language and focus on the direct links — they give you all three placements.
Clue 8: “TV is a prop farthest from the Round table”
“Farthest” can be ambiguous with only three rooms. Does “farthest” mean the greatest physical distance, or just the room not adjacent? If the Round table is in Room C, the farthest room is Room A (since B is between them). The clue links confirm TV goes to Room A, and the Round table to Room C. That’s consistent. If you tried to place TV in Room B, you’d break other clues (like the multiple‑props requirement). So it’s safe to use the natural ordering.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 137 is a straightforward puzzle once you pick the right starting thread. The key was realizing that the “multiple props” clue forces Room B’s wall, and then the CEO’s rule quickly fills Room C’s wall and table. The “farthest” and “neighbor” clues sound more complicated than they are — they just assign values directly. By the end, everything falls into place without any tricky deductions. Happy solving!
Stuck again later? Return to our level guide page for more answers and walkthroughs. If you have comments, suggestions, or feedback, leave them below. Good luck!
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.
More Profile Perfect Guides
Trending Guides

A Visual Dictionary of Profile Perfect Clue Words

How Profile Perfect Balances Direct Clues and Indirect Clues

The cutest logic puzzles in Profile Perfect



