Profile Perfect Level 159 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 5, 2026
Below is the complete final answer for Level 159. Once you've checked it, continue to the step-by-step guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 159 Answer
Here’s the full solved grid for this tennis-racket lineup, followed by a step-by-step breakdown of how each clue locks in the placements.
| Subject | Frame Color | Grip Material | Brand | Used By | Popularity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Racket A | Red | Leather | Yomex | Rafael | Star5 |
| Racket B | Blue / Black | Wood | Heady | Serena | Star3 |
| Racket C | Black | Rock | Walson | Roger / Pete | Star2 |
| Racket D | Pink / Purple | Steel | Yomex | Maria | Star4 |
| Racket E | Green | Fabric | Babalat | Andy / Venus | Star1 |
Profile Perfect Level 159 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 159 gives you five rackets (A through E) with five traits each, plus a starting answer that locks Racket B’s grip material as Wood. Several rackets have two values in the same cell — for example, Racket B’s frame color is both Blue and Black, and Racket C is used by both Roger and Pete. The clues mix direct assignments with positional hints, and a few hidden values (like Racket E’s Fabric grip) only become clear partway through. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Use the popularity clue to anchor the extremes
Clue 1 tells us the most and least popular rackets are farthest from the Walson brand racket. That directly gives us Racket C’s brand as Walson, and it also assigns Racket A the highest popularity (Star5) and Racket E the lowest (Star1). So right away we know:
- Racket C → Brand = Walson
- Racket A → Popularity = Star5
- Racket E → Popularity = Star1
That’s a solid foundation. The “farthest from” part will matter later when we figure out positions, but for now we have three confirmed cells.
Step 2: The Red racket’s popularity and owner
Clue 6 says the Red racket has maximum popularity, which we already know belongs to Racket A. So Racket A’s frame color is Red. Clue 5 adds that a male athlete with a bandana uses the Red racket, and the linked cells show that athlete is Rafael. So Racket A’s Used By is Rafael. That gives us:
- Racket A → Frame Color = Red
- Racket A → Used By = Rafael
Step 3: Heady brand and its sole female athlete
Clue 3 tells us the Heady brand has only one athlete using it, and that athlete is female. The linked cells confirm Heady belongs to Racket B and the athlete is Serena. So:
- Racket B → Brand = Heady
- Racket B → Used By = Serena
Now we know Serena’s racket is Heady and she’s the only Heady user.
Step 4: Serena’s popularity compared to Venus’s
Clue 13 says Serena’s racket is three times more popular than Venus’s. The only popularity values that fit a 3:1 ratio are Star3 and Star1. We already have Star1 assigned to Racket E, and the clue links Venus to Racket E. So Serena must be Star3, and Venus (along with Andy) uses Racket E. That gives:
- Racket B → Popularity = Star3
- Racket E → Used By = Andy / Venus (both)
- Also, Racket A’s Used By = Rafael is reconfirmed
Step 5: The least popular racket’s owners
Clue 7 states the least popular racket (Star1) is owned by Andy and a female athlete. That female is Venus, so Racket E’s Used By cell holds both Andy and Venus. Good.
Step 6: Frame colors between Heady and the Green racket
Clue 4 is a bit cryptic — it says “and frame colors are between Heady and Green rackets.” The linked cells list Racket B’s frame color as Black, Racket C’s as Black, Racket D’s as Pink and Purple, Racket E’s as Green, and Racket B’s brand as Heady. Interpreting this: the rackets with those frame colors (Black, Pink, Purple) lie physically between the Heady-brand racket (Racket B) and the Green racket (Racket E). Since Racket B is Heady and Racket E is Green, the rackets in between (C and D) must have those colors. So:
- Racket B → Frame Color = Blue / Black (we already knew it had two colors, but now Black is confirmed)
- Racket C → Frame Color = Black
- Racket D → Frame Color = Pink / Purple
- Racket E → Frame Color = Green
This also tells us the order: B, then C and D (in some order), then E. But we don’t yet know if C or D comes first.
Step 7: Rock and Steel grips for Racket D and its neighbor
Clue 8 says Rock and Steel are used by Racket D and its neighbor. The linked cells assign Rock to Racket C’s grip and Steel to Racket D’s grip. So Racket D’s grip material is Steel, and its neighbor (Racket C) has Rock. That also reveals Racket C’s grip material is Rock. And the clue includes Racket E’s popularity as Star1, which we already had. So:
- Racket C → Grip Material = Rock
- Racket D → Grip Material = Steel
Step 8: Male athletes avoid girly colors, and Roger’s Rock grip
Clue 9 says the male athletes do not want to use rackets with girly colors. The linked cells point to Pink and Purple (Racket D’s frame colors) and Maria as the user, so Maria is female, fine. Also Racket C’s user Pete is male, and Racket D’s girly colors are used by Maria. No contradiction.
Clue 11 confirms Roger thanked his Rock grip racket, which is Racket C. So Racket C’s Used By includes Roger (along with Pete). That also re-links Racket D’s frame colors to Pink/Purple. So:
- Racket C → Used By = Roger / Pete
Step 9: Walson brand and Purple rackets, plus Yomex popularity
Clue 10 says Walson brand has no Purple colored rackets. Since Racket C is Walson, it cannot have Purple. That’s fine because Racket C’s frame is Black. The clue also gives Racket E’s brand as Babalat. So:
- Racket E → Brand = Babalat
Clue 12 states both Yomex products are the most popular. Yomex must belong to Racket A (Star5) and Racket D (Star4). So:
- Racket A → Brand = Yomex
- Racket D → Brand = Yomex
- Racket D → Popularity = Star4 (since Star5 is taken, Star4 is the next highest)
Step 10: Venus’s grip material and the hidden Fabric
Clue 14 says Venus’s racket does not contain Leather. The only grip materials left are Leather (Racket A), Wood (Racket B), Rock (Racket C), Steel (Racket D), and unknown for Racket E. Since Venus uses Racket E, its grip must be Fabric (the hidden value). So:
- Racket E → Grip Material = Fabric
Now all grip materials are assigned. We also have all brands, frame colors, used by, and popularity.
Step 11: Confirm the remaining cells
The only cell still ambiguous is Racket B’s frame color – we know it’s Blue / Black. That matches the grid. Racket D’s frame is Pink / Purple. Racket C’s used by is Roger / Pete. Racket E’s used by is Andy / Venus. All other slots are single values. The puzzle is complete.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 159
Clue 4: “and frame colors are between Heady and Green rackets”
This clue’s wording is incomplete and can throw you off. It doesn’t say “which” frame colors – you have to look at the linked cells to see that it’s referring to Black, Pink, and Purple. The real meaning is a positional hint: the rackets with those colors sit in the lineup between the Heady-brand racket (B) and the Green racket (E). That helps you place Racket C and Racket D in the middle, but it doesn’t tell you their exact order relative to each other. You’ll need later clues (like neighbor relationships) to sort that out.
Clue 8: “Rock and Steel are used by Racket D and its neighbor”
This one seems straightforward, but remember that “neighbor” means adjacent in the order (A-B-C-D-E). The clue assigns Rock to Racket D’s neighbor and Steel to Racket D itself. That forces the neighbor to be Racket C, not Racket E, because otherwise the order would break. If you mistakenly think the neighbor could be on either side, you might try to put Rock on Racket E, but then the positional clues from earlier (colors between Heady and Green) would conflict. The clue’s linked cells explicitly point to Racket C’s grip as Rock, so trust that.
Clue 13: “Serena’s racket is 3 times more popular than Venus’s”
This is a ratio clue, but the popularity system uses star levels (Star1 through Star5) that aren’t numerical. However, the puzzle treats Star3 as three times Star1, and the linked cells confirm Serena is Star3 and Venus is Star1. The trick is that you need to already know Venus belongs to Racket E (from the least popular clue) and Serena belongs to Racket B (from the Heady clue). Without those earlier deductions, this clue could be confusing because you might think other combinations like Star4 and Star1.33 are possible – but no, only the integer ratio works.
Clue 5: “A male athlete with bandana uses the Red racket”
This clue seems to add extra flavor, but the bandana detail isn’t used elsewhere. The important takeaway is that the Red racket’s user is male, which aligns with Rafael. Some players might wonder if the bandana could be a hidden trait, but it’s just thematic. The clue directly gives you the user, so don’t overthink it.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 159 is a satisfying solve once you latch onto the popularity extremes and the Heady brand clue. The slashed cells (two values per cell) mean you never have to choose one over the other – just accept both as correct for that racket. The positional clues about being “between” and “neighbor” are the main drivers of the order, but since the puzzle doesn’t require you to physically order the rackets (only assign traits), you just need to know which subjects are adjacent. Once you lock in Racket A as Red/Star5, Racket B as Heady/Serena, Racket E as Green/Star1, the rest falls into place with a bit of careful cross-referencing. Happy solving!
Stuck on a future level? Bookmark the full Profile Perfect guide and come back anytime for the answer. And if you have thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments, we’d love to hear from you. Good luck and 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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