Profile Perfect Level 149 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 5, 2026

You can save the final answer for Level 149 from the section below, then read the step-by-step guide afterward. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 149 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 149 Answer

I’ve put the completed grid right here, and in the walkthrough below I’ll show you exactly how each clue locks it in.

SubjectPersonConditionBed ColorRoom NumberDays Admitted
Patient ASueFeverBlue / White354 days
Patient BJohnInjuryYellow251 day
Patient CFeliciaHeadacheGray117 days
Patient DGinnyFlu / RashRed173 days

Profile Perfect Level 149 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 149 drops you into a hospital ward with four patients, each needing a person, condition, bed color, room number, and length of stay. One condition is locked from the start, and several clues use position-based logic (like “next to” and “right half”) to sort things out. A couple of cells hold two values separated by a slash – that means the patient has both, so don’t treat them as options. Let’s walk through the solve step by step.

Step 1: Lock Patient C’s condition and recovery time

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The very first clue says “Even after a week, the patient’s head is still spinning.” That one is marked as an initial answer, so we know Patient C has a headache. The same clue also tells us that Patient C has been admitted for 7 days (a full week). So write down: Patient C – Headache, 7 days. This gives us a solid starting point.

Step 2: Pin down Patient B’s bed color and the leftmost patient

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Clue 2 jumps right in: “Patient B has a Yellow colored bed.” That’s a direct lock – Patient B’s bed is Yellow.
Then clue 3 says, “Leftmost person is Sue, who is in room 35.” The subjects are listed as Patient A, B, C, D in order, so Patient A is the leftmost. That means Patient A is Sue, and her room number is 35. Now we have Patient A’s person and room.

Step 3: Use “most recently admitted” to set Patient B’s days

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Clue 4: “The most recently admitted patient is next to Sue.” The most recent admission would be the patient who has spent the fewest days in the hospital. With the 7-day patient already placed, the smallest remaining number is 1 day. Since Sue is Patient A, the patient next to her (Patient B) must be that 1-day patient. Lock Patient B’s days admitted as 1 day. Good – this also confirms Patient A is indeed Sue.

Step 4: Figure out where the White bed goes

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Clue 5: “White colored bed is not in the right half.” With four patients, the right half means Patients C and D. So the White bed has to be on the left – either Patient A or Patient B. But Patient B already has a Yellow bed, so White must belong to Patient A. Patient A’s bed color is actually a slash-separated value (Blue / White), so this confirms that White is one of her bed colors. We’ll get the Blue part later.

Step 5: Meet Ginny and her sniffles

Clue 6: “Ginny has multiple symptoms, she sneezes a lot.” Sneezing points to flu, so Patient D is Ginny and her condition includes Flu. Remember, Patient D’s condition is listed as Flu / Rash in the final grid – so we’re putting Flu in that cell now. The clue also mentions Patient C’s 7 days, which we already have, so that’s a nice cross-check.

Step 6: Identify John’s accident

Clue 7: “John had an accident yesterday.” That tells us Patient B is John, and his condition is Injury. Lock Patient B’s person and condition. The same clue also repeats that Patient D is Ginny, which matches what we just set.

Step 7: Place Felicia in her room

Clue 8: “Felicia is currently recovering in room.” This names the person and room for Patient C. So Patient C is Felicia, and her room number is 11. This fits with what we already know about Patient C (headache, 7 days). Now we have Patient C’s person and room locked in.

Step 8: Sue’s symptom doesn’t affect her skin

Clue 9: “Sue’s symptom does not affect her skin.” Sue is Patient A. A fever is a whole-body condition that doesn’t specifically attack the skin, so her condition must be Fever. Lock Patient A’s condition as Fever.

Step 9: Match the Rash with the Red bed

Clue 10: “Person with Rash is sleeping on the Red bed.” Rash is the second half of Patient D’s condition (Flu / Rash). So this clue confirms that Patient D also has Rash, and that her bed color is Red. Write down Patient D’s bed as Red, and add Rash to her condition.

Step 10: Compare John’s and Ginny’s room numbers

Clue 11: “John’s room number is bigger than Ginny’s.” John is Patient B, Ginny is Patient D. The clue directly gives the numbers: Patient B’s room is 25, Patient D’s room is 17. It also mentions Patient D’s Red bed, which we already have. So lock these two room numbers.

Step 11: Find the Blue bed and its admission length

Clue 12: “Patient with Blue bed has been admitted for 4 days.” The only patient who could have a Blue bed is Patient A – her bed is Blue / White. So Patient A’s bed includes Blue, and her days admitted are 4. That also ties to Patient C’s room number (11), which is already set.

Step 12: Fill the final days for Patient D

Now we have three days: Patient A – 4 days, Patient B – 1 day, Patient C – 7 days. The only remaining number of days is 3, so Patient D must have been admitted for 3 days. That completes the entire grid. All patients, conditions, bed colors, rooms, and lengths of stay are confirmed.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 149

Clue 4: “The most recently admitted patient is next to Sue”

This one can trip you up if you don’t know what “most recently admitted” means. In a hospital setting, the most recent patient has been there the shortest time. With 1 day being the smallest possible, you have to realize that Patient B (next to Sue) is the one. Some players might think “most recently” means the highest number of days, but that would be the opposite – the puzzle uses the natural meaning.

Clue 5: “White colored bed is not in the right half”

The phrase “right half” isn’t explicitly defined. With four subjects, it’s natural to split them into two groups: the left two and the right two. If you assumed the right half meant only the very last column, you might put White on Patient C or D incorrectly. The key is that “half” refers to two patients, not one, so White must be in the left group (A or B).

Clue 10: “Person with Rash is sleeping on the Red bed”

Because Patient D’s condition is split between Flu and Rash, you might think Rash is a separate patient. But the clue is telling you that the same patient who has Rash also has the Red bed. Since we already know Patient D has Flu from clue 6, adding Rash makes sense – it’s a two-for-one condition cell. Trying to assign Rash to a different patient would break the grid.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 149 is a clean hospital-themed puzzle that relies on a mix of direct assignments and relative position clues. The trickiest part is handling the slash-separated cells (Blue / White for Patient A’s bed and Flu / Rash for Patient D’s condition) without thinking you have to pick one. Once you treat both values as belonging to the same cell, the rest flows smoothly. The “next to” and “right half” clues give just enough positional guidance, and the early lock on Patient C’s headache and 7 days sets a nice anchor. Happy solving!

Before you move on, bookmark our all-level answer guide in case you need another answer later. Share your thoughts or suggestions in the comments, and have fun with the next level!

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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