Profile Perfect Level 142 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 4, 2026

The quick solution for Level 142 is shown below first. After that, I'll explain how to reach the answer step by step. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 142 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 142 Answer

I’ve placed the solved grid right here so you can check your work or peek ahead. After the table, I’ll walk through every clue in the order that makes the logic flow naturally.

PerformerCostumeExpressionScenePopularity
Performer AFairyEvilJungleStar3
Performer BTreeConfusedCastleStar2
Performer CPrincessAngryLava MountainStar1
Performer DWitchSadCastleStar4

Profile Perfect Level 142 Hints And Walkthrough

In this level, you’re matching four performers—A, B, C, and D—to their costume, expression, scene, and popularity rating. Right away the puzzle locks in Performer B’s popularity as Star2. That single locked cell gives us a solid anchor, and the clues build outward from there. The trickiest part is keeping track of who’s next to whom because several clues rely on “beside” and “between” relationships. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock in Performer B’s popularity and find the most popular performer

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The initial answer tells us Performer B has a popularity of Star2. Clue 1 says the most popular performer is not beside the one who’s already got a locked popularity (that’s Performer B). So whoever has Star4—the highest rating—cannot be directly next to Performer B in the lineup. At this point we don’t know the order of performers yet, but we do know that Star4 must belong to someone who isn’t a direct neighbor of Performer B. Clue 1 also directly links Performer D’s popularity to Star4. So Performer D is the most popular performer. Good start.

Step 2: Place the Evil expression and start connecting scenes

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Clue 2 says the Evil character is not in the same scene as any other performer. That clue gives us Performer A’s expression as Evil. And since Evil must be alone in its scene, Performer A cannot share a scene with anyone else. Later clues will tell us which scene that is, but for now we know Performer A’s expression is set.

Step 3: Use the Princess and popularity clue to link Performer C and D

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Clue 3 says the Princess is next to the popularity performer. The “popularity performer” likely means the one with the highest popularity—Performer D (Star4). So the Princess must be a direct neighbor of Performer D. The clue also confirms Performer C’s costume is Princess and Performer D’s popularity is Star4. So Performer C is the Princess and sits next to Performer D. That tells us the lineup order must have D and C adjacent.

Step 4: Arrange the Tree, Witch, and Princess in order

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Clue 4 gives us a direct positional relationship: between the Tree and the Witch is the Princess. So the order is Tree – Princess – Witch (or Witch – Princess – Tree). Since we know Performer C is the Princess, the Tree and Witch must be on either side of C. The clue also assigns Performer B as Tree and Performer D as Witch. So B (Tree) and D (Witch) flank C (Princess). That means the line of performers is either B – C – D or D – C – B. We already have D next to C, so both orders work. But clue 1 said the most popular (D) is not beside the one with Star2 (B). In a line of four, if B – C – D, then D is next to C but not beside B (they are separated by C). That satisfies clue 1. If the order were D – C – B, then D would be next to C, and B would be on the other side of C, so D is still not directly beside B (C is between). Both orders work so far. We’ll need more clues to decide.

Step 5: Compare popularity between Fairy and Princess

Clue 5 says the Fairy is more popular than the Princess. The Princess (Performer C) has a popularity we don’t know yet, but clue 6 will tell us it’s Star1. The clue also links Performer A as Fairy and Performer C as Princess, and gives Performer A popularity Star3 and Performer C popularity Star1. So Fairy (Performer A) is Star3, Princess is Star1. That fits: Star3 > Star1. Now we have three popularity ratings: A=Star3, B=Star2, C=Star1, D=Star4. All four locked in.

Step 6: The Princess is not pleased at all

Clue 6 directly tells us the Princess is angry. It also confirms the Princess’s costume (already set) and popularity (Star1). So Performer C’s expression is Angry, and we’ve already got Star1 from the previous clue. Good double-check.

Step 7: Use the plant and Witch neighbor count to resolve the lineup

Clue 7 says the plant (Tree) has more neighbors than the Witch. In a linear order of four performers, each performer can have 1 or 2 neighbors (end positions have 1, middle have 2). So the Tree must have more neighbors than the Witch, meaning the Tree must be in a middle spot (2 neighbors) and the Witch must be at an end (1 neighbor). We know Tree is Performer B, Witch is Performer D. If the order is B – C – D, then B is at the left end (only neighbor C), D is at the right end (only neighbor C). That gives both 1 neighbor—equal, not more. So that order fails. The other order is D – C – B. In that case, D is left end (1 neighbor: C), C is middle (2 neighbors: D and B), B is right end (1 neighbor: C). So Tree (B) is at the right end with 1 neighbor, Witch (D) at left end with 1 neighbor—still equal. Wait, both ends have 1 neighbor. That doesn’t satisfy “more neighbors” either. But the clue says “Tree has more neighbors than Witch.” In a four-performer line, only a middle performer has 2 neighbors; ends have 1. So Tree must be a middle performer, Witch must be an end. In D – C – B, Tree (B) is an end. In B – C – D, Tree (B) is also an end. Neither gives Tree 2 neighbors. So perhaps the lineup is not in a simple linear order? The puzzle doesn’t explicitly say the performers are in a row; it might be a circular arrangement? Let’s check clues again. Clue 1 said “beside” and clue 4 said “between” – typical logic grid puzzles assume a linear order, but sometimes they mean adjacency in a list. However, clue 7’s neighbor count suggests a linear order where ends have 1 neighbor and middles have 2. If both B and D are at ends, they each have 1. But the clue says Tree has more than Witch. So one of them must be a middle. The only way for Tree to have more neighbors is if Tree is in a middle position and Witch is at an end. That means the order must have Tree not at an end. In our earlier derived order, Tree (B) is always next to Princess (C) and the other side is either A or empty? We haven’t placed Performer A yet. The four performers are A, B, C, D. We have B, C, D in a sequence. A must be placed somewhere. The clue says “The plant has more neighbors than Witch” – plant is Tree (B), Witch is D. So B must have 2 neighbors, D must have 1. That means B is in a middle spot, D is at an end. The only way for B to be middle is if the order is something like ? – B – ?. Since we already have B next to C, that means C is one of B’s neighbors. The other neighbor must be either A or D? But D is at an end. If D is at an end, it cannot be adjacent to B if B is middle and D is end? Actually a middle position can have two neighbors; one could be C, the other could be A. That would put B between C and A. Meanwhile D must be at an end, so D could be at the opposite end from A or next to C? Let’s consider linear order possibilities. We have four slots: 1,2,3,4. Ends are slots 1 and 4. D must be at an end. B must have two neighbors, so B cannot be at an end. So B must be in slot 2 or 3. We also know C is adjacent to B (from clue 4: Tree and Witch have Princess between them? Wait clue 4 says “Between the Tree and Witch is the Princess.” So the order is Tree – Princess – Witch in some sequence. That means B and D are separated by C, and C is between them. So the three are consecutive: B, C, D in that order or D, C, B. In either case, B and D are not adjacent; they have C between them. In a line of 4, if B and D are separated by C, then each of B and D has at least one neighbor (C). Their other neighbor depends on position. For B to have two neighbors, B must have a neighbor on the other side besides C. That neighbor could be A. Similarly, D could have a neighbor on the other side besides C if D is not at an end. But D must be at an end (to have fewer neighbors than B). So D cannot have a second neighbor. That means D must be at an end, and C must be adjacent to D, and the other side of C is B. So the order would be D – C – B – ? or ? – B – C – D? If D is at left end (slot1), then D has only neighbor C. Then C is slot2, B is slot3, and the remaining slot4 must be A. That gives B (slot3) neighbors C (slot2) and A (slot4) – two neighbors. D (slot1) only neighbor C – one neighbor. That satisfies clue 7: Tree (B) has 2 neighbors, Witch (D) has 1. Also the order D – C – B – A fits “between the Tree and Witch is the Princess”? Let's check: Tree (B) and Witch (D) have Princess (C) between them? In that order, the sequence is D, C, B. Between D and B is C. Yes, C is between them. Good. Also clue 3 said Princess is next to the popularity performer (D). In this order, C is next to D. Perfect. And clue 1: most popular (D) not beside the one with Star2 (B). In D – C – B, D is beside C, not beside B. B is two steps away. Works. So the final order is D, C, B, A. (Left to right). But we also need to assign scenes and expressions. Let’s continue.

Step 8: Assign scenes using the Lava Mountain and Castle clues

Clue 8 says Witch (Performer D) appeared in Castle. So D’s scene is Castle. Clue 10 says the person in Lava Mountain is between the Castles. That means there are two Castles (two performers with Castle scene) and the Lava Mountain performer is between them. We already have D as Castle. Who else is Castle? The clue says “between the Castles” – plural. So there must be another Castle performer. From the order D – C – B – A, D is at left end. If the Lava Mountain is between two Castles, then the Castles must be at positions that have a middle performer between them. In a linear order, the two Castles could be at ends, and the middle performer(s) between them. For example, if D is Castle left end, and another Castle is at right end (slot4), then the middle positions (slot2 and slot3) are between them. Clue says “Person in Lava Mountain is between the Castles” – meaning that performer is located somewhere between the two Castle locations. It doesn’t say immediately adjacent, just between them in order. So if Castles are at ends, any performer in slot2 or slot3 is between them. We need to see which performer is in Lava Mountain. Clue 6 told us Princess (C) is Angry, but not scene yet. Clue 10 directly gives Performer C’s scene as Lava Mountain. So C is Lava Mountain. In our order D – C – B – A, C is at slot2. If Castles are at ends (D at left end and ? at right end), then C is between them. So we need the right end (slot4) to be Castle. That would be Performer A. So A’s scene must be Castle. But we already have D as Castle. That gives two Castles. Let's check clue 2: Evil character (Performer A) is not in the same scene with other person. If Performer A is Castle, then A would share Castle scene with Performer D. That violates clue 2 because A would be in the same scene as D. So that can’t happen. Therefore the two Castles cannot be at ends if one of them is A? Actually clue 2 says Evil is not in the same scene with any other person. So A’s scene must be unique. So A cannot be Castle if D is also Castle. So the other Castle cannot be A. Maybe the two Castles are not at ends? Let’s think. The wording “between the Castles” means the Lava Mountain performer is physically located between two Castle performers in the lineup. That implies the two Castle performers are on either side of the Lava Mountain performer. So the order must be Castle – Lava Mountain – Castle. We have D as Castle, C as Lava Mountain. So the other Castle must be the performer on the other side of C. In our order D – C – B – A, the performer on the other side of C is B (since C is between D and B). So B must be the second Castle. That would make order Castle (D) – Lava Mountain (C) – Castle (B) – ? (A). Then A is at the end. D and B are both Castle. That works: C is between D and B. Check clue 2: Evil is A, whose scene is not yet set, but A is not Castle, so no conflict. Also clue 8 already said Witch (D) appeared in Castle, fine. So B’s scene becomes Castle. Now we have: D Castle, C Lava Mountain, B Castle. That leaves A’s scene. Clue 2 said Evil is not in same scene as anyone else, and the only remaining scene is Jungle. So A’s scene is Jungle. That fits because Jungle hasn't been used.

Step 9: Determine expressions for B and D

We have expressions: A is Evil, C is Angry. Remaining expressions: Sad and Confused. Clue 9 says the Tree performer (B) is not Sad. So B cannot be Sad, therefore B must be Confused. Then D (Witch) gets the remaining Sad. Clue 9 also confirms Performer A’s expression is Evil (already set) and Performer D’s popularity is Star4 (already set). So all expressions are resolved.

Step 10: Finalize the order and check all clues

We have order: D (Castle, Witch, Sad, Star4), C (Lava Mountain, Princess, Angry, Star1), B (Castle, Tree, Confused, Star2), A (Jungle, Fairy, Evil, Star3). That matches the solved grid. Clue 7: Tree (B) has more neighbors than Witch (D). In linear order, positions: D (1), C (2), B (3), A (4). D has only neighbor C (1 neighbor). B has neighbors C and A (2 neighbors). So yes, more. All other clues satisfied. Done.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

At this point all cells are filled. The final grid matches the table at the top.


Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 142

Clue 7: “The plant has more neighbors than Witch”

This one is easy to misinterpret because you need to consider the physical lineup of performers. The clue doesn’t say how many neighbors each has; it only compares them. If you assume the order from clues 3 and 4 gives B–C–D or D–C–B, both give B and D the same number of neighbors (1 each) until you realize there’s a fourth performer (A) that can be placed to break the tie. You have to actively insert A into the order to give B a second neighbor. Many players might get stuck thinking the Tree and Witch are already fixed in a three-performer block.

Clue 10: “Person in Lava Mountain is between the Castles”

This clue uses the plural “Castles,” meaning at least two performers share the Castle scene. But clue 2 says the Evil character (A) cannot share a scene with anyone, so A can’t be one of the Castles. That forces the two Castles to be D and B. The phrasing “between the Castles” implies a linear order where the Lava Mountain performer sits in the middle. Without clue 2, you might mistakenly put A as the second Castle, but then clue 2 would break.

Clue 1: “Most popular performer is not beside the one [initial]”

The initial answer is Performer B’s popularity as Star2. The most popular is Star4 (Performer D). At first you might think “beside” means immediately adjacent in the lineup. With the order we eventually find, D is not beside B—they are separated by C. That holds true. But if you had guessed the opposite order (B–C–D), D would still not be beside B? Actually in B–C–D, D is beside C, not B, so it also works. The trick is that clue 1 alone doesn’t force one order; it only eliminates orders where D is immediately next to B. That ambiguity gets resolved later by clue 7.


Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 142 is a satisfying mix of direct costume assignments and careful positional reasoning. The key was using the “neighbor count” clue to decide which end of the line the Witch sits on, then letting the Castle scenes lock everything into place. If you ever feel stuck, remember that the initial locked answer often acts as a pivot point—everything else revolves around who sits next to whom. Keep at it, and soon you’ll have all four performers matched perfectly.

Working through more levels? Keep our full level walkthrough list bookmarked for quick access to future answers. Have a suggestion or thought? Leave it in the comments. Good luck and 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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