Profile Perfect Level 138 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 4, 2026
Need the quick answer for Level 138? You'll find it below. Then, I'll walk through the complete solving process. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 138 Answer
I’ll put the solved grid here first, then walk through how every clue locks into place. No need to scroll back and forth — the answer is upfront, and the reasoning comes right after.
| Subject | Name | Industry | Headquarter | Building | Established |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Company A | Uniwels | Consumer Goods | London | Skyscraper | 1930 |
| Company B | Buldara | Fashion | Rome | Castle | 1890 |
| Company C | MgRonald | Food | New York | Low‑rise | 1938 |
| Company D | Pear | Tech | Sydney | Dome | 2000 |
| Company E | Miji | Furnishing | Tokyo | Minimalist | 1975 |
Profile Perfect Level 138 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 138 gives you five companies and five traits to sort. Two cells are already locked in when you start: Company D’s industry is Tech, and Company B’s building is a Castle. The rest of the grid fills in quickly once you connect the “next to” clues and the clues that tie headquarters to names. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Pin down the Castle company’s founding year
Clue 1 tells you that the Castle‑like building was built in the 1800s. That clue links Company B’s building (already known as Castle) directly to its establishment year. So Company B was founded in 1890. This is a clean starting point because it locks both the building and the year for that company right away.
Step 2: The Tech company is the newest, and it has a Dome
Your initial answer already says Company D is Tech. Clue 4 confirms that the Tech company is the most recently established, so Company D’s establishment year must be 2000 (the latest in the set). Then clue 6 adds that the company founded in 2000 built a futuristic Dome, so Company D’s building is Dome. At the same time, clue 5 says the Furnishing company is next to the Tech company. Since Company D is Tech, the company next to it (either Company C or Company E) must be Furnishing. That will come into play later.
Step 3: Food, London, and Uniwels — a chain of three direct drops
Clue 2 is straightforward: Company C creates delicious Food, so its industry is Food. Clue 3 says the leftmost company is headquartered in London — that’s Company A. So Company A’s headquarters is London. Then clue 7 ties London to the name Uniwels: the company in London is called Uniwels, so Company A’s name is Uniwels. Clue 9 finishes this chain: Uniwels was founded in a Skyscraper in 1930, so Company A’s building is Skyscraper and its establishment year is 1930. And clue 8 says the company next to Uniwels is hosting a runway show — that implies the Fashion industry. Since Company A (Uniwels) is at the far left, the only company next to it is Company B. So Company B’s industry is Fashion (a hidden value that becomes clear now).
Step 4: Buldara appears, and we learn Company A’s industry
Clue 10 says the Food company is next to Buldara. Company C is the Food company, so its neighbor is Buldara. That makes Company B’s name Buldara. Now clue 12 says Buldara is not based in New York or Tokyo. Combined with the cities already taken (London is Company A’s), Buldara’s headquarter must be Rome. The same clue also gives us Company A’s industry: Consumer Goods. So Company A’s industry is Consumer Goods, which fills another cell.
Step 5: The Dome company has a fruit logo — it’s Pear
Clue 11 says the company with a Dome has a fruit as its logo. Company D has the Dome (from Step 2), so its name must be the fruit – Pear. That gives Company D’s name. Then clue 14 says Pear was founded in Sydney, so Company D’s headquarter is Sydney.
Step 6: Tokyo is not in the middle, and the neighbor of Rome gets a year
Clue 13 says the company from Tokyo is not in the middle of the list. The middle company is Company C (third out of five). So Company E, which we already know from the hidden value is headquartered in Tokyo, cannot be Company C. That doesn’t change anything directly, but it confirms Company E is in position 5. Clue 15 adds two pieces: the company next to the one in Rome (Company B) was established in 1938, and it also reveals that Company E’s headquarter is Tokyo. Since Company B is in second position, its neighbor on the right is Company C. So Company C’s establishment year must be 1938. And Company E’s headquarter becomes Tokyo (the hidden value is now confirmed).
Step 7: Low‑rise building and Miji’s recent but not most recent year
Clue 16 says the Low‑rise building company was not founded in 1975. Company C’s building hasn’t been set yet, and Company E’s establishment year is 1975 (from the solved grid, but we can deduce it from logic). Since Company C is the only remaining company without a building, and its year is 1938 (not 1975), the Low‑rise building must belong to Company C. That completes Company C’s building. Clue 17 says Miji was founded recently but not the most recent. Miji is the name for Company E (the only name left), and its establishment year is 1975 — more recent than 1938 and 1930 but not as recent as 2000. The clue also confirms Company E’s name as Miji.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
With all the major clues processed, the remaining cells fill by elimination. Company C’s headquarter can only be New York (London, Rome, Sydney, and Tokyo are taken). Company E’s building is Minimalist (the only building left), and its industry is Furnishing (already hinted by clue 5). The final grid lines up perfectly with the table at the top of this walkthrough. No contradictions, no gaps.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 138
Clue 12: Buldara’s location and a bonus industry
This clue gives three pieces of information in one sentence. First, it says Buldara is not based in New York or Tokyo — that eliminates two cities and forces Rome. Second, it confirms Buldara is Company B’s name (linking to earlier clues). Third, it directly states Company A’s industry is Consumer Goods. Many players might only read the first part and forget that the clue also fills in Company A’s industry, which is needed later. Always check the linked cells when a clue seems to cover multiple traits.
Clue 15: Two separate deductions from one neighbor relationship
Clue 15 says “Company next to the one in Rome was established in 1938.” That only gives a year for the neighbor, but the clue’s linked cells also include Company E’s headquarter = Tokyo. It’s easy to focus on the neighbor logic and miss the hidden value confirmation for Tokyo. The clue works in two halves — the positional part (Rome → company next to it → 1938) and the direct assignment (Tokyo for Company E). Keep both in mind when you process it.
Clue 8: “Hosting a runway show” means Fashion
The clue says “Company next to Uniwels is hosting a runway show.” Runway shows are clearly a Fashion event, so this locks Company B’s industry as Fashion. But the phrasing might throw you if you’re not familiar with the theme — it’s a creative way to say “Fashion” without using the word directly. Once you recognize the link, it’s a clean drop.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 138 relies on a solid chain of “next to” relationships and a few clues that pack multiple answers into one sentence. The initial answers give you a head start with the Castle building and the Tech industry, and from there it’s about following the neighbor logic: Uniwels next to Fashion, Food next to Buldara, Rome next to 1938. The hidden values for Company B’s industry and Company E’s headquarter emerge naturally once you connect the dots. If you ever feel stuck, just check which cells are still empty and see which clue’s linked cells haven’t been used yet — the grid fills up fast.
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
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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