Profile Perfect Level 177 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 7, 2026

Below is the complete final answer for Level 177. Once you've checked it, continue to the step-by-step guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 177 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 177 Answer

If you’re stuck on this one, here’s the completed grid first, and after the table I’ll walk through every clue that locks it into place.

SubjectOccupationToolShift Time
Worker AWelderWrenchNight
Worker BChefHammerEvening / Afternoon
Worker CEngineerScrewdriverMorning
Worker DChemistGlovesEvening

Profile Perfect Level 177 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 177 throws you into a factory floor with four workers, each needing an occupation, a tool, and a shift time. The puzzle hands you no initial answers, but a chain of direct and positional clues builds the whole grid step by step. One worker has a split shift (two values in the same cell), and a couple of clues use left/right and neighbor logic. Let’s work through it.

Step 1: Lock in the first direct assignments

screenshot

Clue 1 tells us straight away that Worker D wears Gloves. No debate there, so I set Worker D’s tool to Gloves.
Clue 2 says the Chef is a certain worker – and from the linked cells, that’s Worker B. So Worker B’s occupation is Chef.
Clue 5 connects the Chef to a tool: the Chef uses a Hammer to hang the new menu. That nails Worker B’s tool as Hammer.
Clue 7 introduces Worker D as a Chemist who’s been working nonstop since 5 PM – so her shift is Evening. That gives me Worker D occupation = Chemist, shift = Evening.
At this point I have:

  • Worker B: Chef, Hammer, shift unknown
  • Worker D: Chemist, Gloves, Evening

Step 2: Place the Engineer using the neighbor clue

screenshot

Clue 3 says the Engineer is next to the Gloves wearer. The Gloves wearer is Worker D. In the order Workers A, B, C, D, the only subject directly next to Worker D is Worker C (B is next to A and C, but D’s immediate neighbor is C). So Worker C must be the Engineer. That fills Worker C’s occupation as Engineer.

Step 3: The Welder and the festival clue

screenshot

Clue 9 is a bit tricky at first. It says the Welder is attending his kid’s school festival in the morning. The linked cells show Worker A as the Welder, and his shift is Night – which makes sense: if he works at night, he’s free in the morning for the festival. So Worker A’s occupation = Welder and shift = Night. The same clue also ties Worker B to two shift times: Evening and Afternoon. That matches the multi-shift worker mentioned in clue 6. So Worker B’s shift now includes both Evening and Afternoon.
Now I have:

  • Worker A: Welder, shift Night
  • Worker B: Chef, Hammer, shift Evening / Afternoon
  • Worker C: Engineer, shift unknown
  • Worker D: Chemist, Gloves, Evening

Step 4: Morning and night – not neighbors

screenshot

Clue 4 says the Morning person and the night owl are not neighbors. The linked cells tell me Worker A is the night owl (Night shift) and Worker C is the Morning person. In the lineup (A, B, C, D), A and C are not neighbors – Worker B sits between them. So the clue is confirmed, and I set Worker C’s shift to Morning. The same clue also repeats Worker D’s tool as Gloves, but we already have that.
Now the shifts are:

  • Worker A: Night
  • Worker B: Evening / Afternoon
  • Worker C: Morning
  • Worker D: Evening

Step 5: The left-of clue and the final tool

Clue 8 states the Wrench is on the left of the Hammer. The Hammer belongs to Worker B. So the Wrench must be with the worker to the left of Worker B – that’s Worker A. That confirms Worker A’s tool as Wrench.
The only tool left unassigned is Screwdriver, which must go to Worker C (Engineer). Now every cell is filled:

  • Worker A: Welder, Wrench, Night
  • Worker B: Chef, Hammer, Evening / Afternoon
  • Worker C: Engineer, Screwdriver, Morning
  • Worker D: Chemist, Gloves, Evening

The solved grid matches exactly, and the multi-shift cell (Worker B’s shift) correctly holds both Evening and Afternoon.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 177

Clue 4: “The Morning person and the night owl are not neighbors”

This one can trip you up because it lists three linked cells: Worker A’s shift (Night), Worker C’s shift (Morning), and Worker D’s tool (Gloves). New players might think the Gloves reference is a third condition, but it’s just a repeat from an earlier clue. The real deduction is that Morning and Night workers aren’t adjacent. In the order A–B–C–D, they’re already separated by Worker B, so the clue simply confirms those shifts rather than placing them. If you try to use it to force a position change, you’ll get stuck.

Clue 9: “Welder is attending his kid’s school festival in the Morning”

The wording sounds like the Welder’s shift should be Morning, but the linked cells assign him a Night shift. The trick is to read it as “the Welder attends the festival in the morning, which means his work shift happens at night.” It’s a classic logic-puzzle misdirection – the action happens during free time, not during the shift. Once you grasp that, it perfectly locks Worker A as Welder with Night shift.

Clue 6: “Multi-shift worker works consecutive shifts with no breaks”

This clue doesn’t give you a concrete value until you combine it with others. It tells you Worker B has both Evening and Afternoon (based on the linked cells), but you need Clue 9 to confirm that Worker B is indeed that multi-shift worker. Without that link, you might wonder whether another worker could have two shifts. The important takeaway: the slash-separated value in the final grid (Evening / Afternoon) is not a choice – both times belong to Worker B.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 177 is a satisfying puzzle because every clue reinforces another – the left-of clue, the neighbor clue, and the festival clue all point to a single arrangement. The split shift cell is handled cleanly by the multi-shift worker clue, and no hidden values or extra columns complicate the solve. Once you get comfortable reading “next to” and “on the left of” in a linear order, the whole grid falls into place quickly. Happy puzzling

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 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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