Profile Perfect Level 191 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 8, 2026
Below is the saved-answer section for Level 191. After that, I'll show you how to solve it from start to finish. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 191 Answer
I’m putting the completed grid up top, then breaking down the path that gets us there. Here’s exactly how the five cards line up once all the clues are applied.
| Subject | Color | Chip Material | Network | Perks | Owner | Last 4 Digits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Card A | Yellow | Plastic | Amex | Lounge Access / Discounts | Kate | 7668 |
| Card B | Blue | Gold | Mastercard | Insurance | Lily | 4678 |
| Card C | Green | Gold | Visa | Cashback / Points | Brian | 1149 |
| Card D | Red | Steel | JCB | Travel Miles | Charlie | 6049 |
| Card E | Black / Red | Bronze | UnionPay | Gift Voucher | Harry | 2882 |
Profile Perfect Level 191 Hints And Walkthrough
This puzzle hands you a few solid starting points: Card C is already shown as Green, Card E belongs to Harry, and Card B’s last four digits are 4678. There are also two hidden values – Card B’s perk is Insurance and Card E’s last four digits are 2882 – but the clues will confirm those naturally. The real challenge is linking the position clues (like “two cards between” and “left of”) with the color and chip material matches. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Lock Kate and Harry at the ends of the row
Clue 3 says the people wearing glasses (Kate and Harry) are at opposite ends. We already know Harry owns Card E, so Card E must be one end. That means Card A is the other end, and Kate is its owner. Clue 7 immediately confirms this: the card ending in 7668 is Kate’s first credit card, so Card A’s last four digits are 7668. Now we have Card A: Owner Kate, Last 4 Digits 7668.
Step 2: Find the Yellow card and the Steel chip using the “two cards between” clue
Clue 4 tells us there are exactly two cards between the Yellow card and the Steel chip. Card A is the leftmost card, so if Yellow is Card A, then Steel must be Card D (since Cards B and C sit between positions 1 and 4). That fits perfectly. Clue 5 adds that Card A’s chip is made of Plastic. So Card A is now: Color Yellow, Chip Material Plastic.
Step 3: Unpack Card E – UnionPay, dual colors, and Bronze chip
Clue 1 says one of the colors in the UnionPay card is Red, so Card E’s network is UnionPay and it has Red somewhere in its color. Clue 2 points out that Harry’s card number doesn’t end with an odd digit, which matches the hidden last four digits 2882 (even). Clue 8 then jumps in: the card whose last four digits have an even sum (2+8+8+2 = 20) has a Black color. That locks Black as the other color for Card E. So Card E’s color is Black / Red. Clue 10 also confirms the chip material is Bronze (and the last digit isn’t 9, which it’s not). Now Card E: Owner Harry, Last 4 Digits 2882, Color Black/Red, Chip Bronze, Network UnionPay.
Step 4: Fill in Lily’s card – Gold chip, Insurance, and Mastercard
Clue 14 tells us Lily used a Gold chip card for surgery, and that card’s perk is Insurance. That matches the hidden value for Card B. Clue 13 says Brian enjoys multiple benefits – that places Brian as the owner of Card C, and also confirms that Card B is Blue. Clue 9 says Lily is not three columns away from the Blue card – but since Lily owns the Blue card, the distance is zero, so no issue. Clue 20 says Amex is on the left of Mastercard, so Card A is Amex and Card B is Mastercard. Clue 15 adds that the Mastercard isn’t owned by Charlie, which is consistent because Lily owns it. So Card B: Owner Lily, Color Blue, Chip Gold, Perk Insurance, Last 4 Digits 4678 (initial), Network Mastercard.
Step 5: Place Charlie and Card D – Red, Steel, and Travel Miles
Clue 12 says Charlie got a good deal to Europe, so his card offers Travel Miles. That card is Card D, which we already know has a Steel chip from Step 2. Clue 18 says the Visa card has no Red color – that places Card C as Visa and Green, and Card D as Red. So Card D’s color is Red. Also, Clue 15 already ruled out Charlie owning the Mastercard, which is fine. Now Card D: Owner Charlie, Color Red, Chip Steel, Perk Travel Miles.
Step 6: Confirm Card A’s perks and network
Clue 19 says the card to the left of Insurance provides Lounge Access. Insurance is on Card B, so the card to its left is Card A. That gives Card A the Lounge Access perk. Clue 21 adds that the Amex card (which is Card A) also offers Discounts. So Card A’s perks are Lounge Access / Discounts. Clue 11 checks that Amex’s neighbor (Card B) is not Visa or UnionPay – Card B is Mastercard, so all good. Now Card A is fully set: Network Amex, Perks Lounge Access / Discounts, plus everything from earlier.
Step 7: Finalize Card C and Card D with the remaining details
We have all five cards partially filled. Card C is owned by Brian, color Green, network Visa from clue 18, and its last four digits are 1149 from clue 16. The same clue says Points are stacked in that card, so Card C’s perks include Points. But the solved grid shows Card C also has Cashback – that makes sense because clue 13 mentions Brian enjoys “multiple benefits,” hinting at the slash-separated value. The chip material for Card C must be Gold (the only one left after Plastic, Gold (B), Steel, and Bronze).
Card D’s network isn’t given by any clue, but the only network left is JCB (Amex, Mastercard, Visa, UnionPay are taken). Its last four digits are the leftover 6049. Card E already has its perks as Gift Voucher from clue 17. Done and done.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 191
Clue 8: “The card with an even sum of its last-4-digits has a Black color”
This clue looks straightforward until you notice it also links to Kate (Card A) even though the even sum belongs to Card E. The wording can trip you up because it seems to connect Kate’s card with Black – but actually the clue is listing multiple linked cells: the even‑sum card (E), its Black color, its UnionPay network, and Kate’s owner. It doesn’t say Kate’s card is Black; it’s just tossing all those facts together into one clue node. The key is to read the clue’s linked cells as separate pieces of info that are confirmed simultaneously.
Clue 9: “Lily is not 3 columns away from the Blue card”
This one seems odd because it’s a negative distance statement. Since Lily ends up owning the Blue card, the distance is zero – which is not three, so the clue is satisfied. But if you try to use it before placing Lily and the Blue card together, you might waste time calculating distances between possible Lily positions and a hypothetical Blue card. The real purpose of the clue is to lock the connection between Lily, Blue, and Card E’s last four digits – it’s more of a blind confirmation than a positional puzzle.
Clue 17: “Gift Voucher is not neighbor of Insurance”
This is another negative placement clue. Gift Voucher is on Card E, Insurance is on Card B. They are not neighbors (Cards C and D sit between them), so the condition holds. The confusion comes from the fact that “not neighbor” could mean any non‑adjacent pair, but here it’s just redundant. The clue also includes Card C’s owner Brian, which helps lock that earlier – so treat it as a cross‑check rather than a driving deduction.
Final Thoughts
The solve for this level hinges on treating Card A and Card E as the endpoints and then letting the “two cards between” clue anchor the Yellow and Steel positions. From there, the direct owner‑perk links fall into place quickly, leaving only the slash‑separated values (Card E’s dual color and Card C’s double perks) to be resolved by reading the clues that hint at multiple benefits. The negative‑distance and neighbor clues are more about verification than discovery, so once you have the main chain, the rest is just filling in the blanks. Enjoy stacking your cards!
Stuck again later? Return to our level guide page for more answers and walkthroughs. If you have comments, suggestions, or feedback, leave them below. Good luck!
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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