Profile Perfect Level 196 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 8, 2026
Before we get into the full walkthrough, here is the final answer for Level 196. Save it if needed, then continue below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 196 Answer
I’ve placed the full solution below so you can check your work, and after that I’ll walk through each clue to show how everything connects.
| Subject | Type | Open Time | Entry Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attraction A | Sand Boarding | Evening / Noon | $$ |
| Attraction B | Air Balloon | Night / Dawn | $ |
| Attraction C | Sand Bath | Morning | $ |
Profile Perfect Level 196 Hints And Walkthrough
When I first looked at Profile Perfect Level 196, I noticed we’re dealing with three attractions and three traits: the type of activity, when it opens, and how much it costs. One starting answer is already locked in – Attraction B costs $ – and the clues give us plenty of direct type and time matches. The trickiest part is that two open-time cells end up containing two time slots each (Evening / Noon for one attraction, Night / Dawn for another), so I had to pay close attention to which clues support which values. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Use the starting answer and the most expensive clue to lock Attraction A’s type and cost
The puzzle gives us Attraction B’s entry cost as $ right from the start. That’s a handy anchor. Clue 1 then tells us that Sand Boarding is the most expensive attraction. The only cost options are $ and $$, so “most expensive” means $$. The same clue links Sand Boarding directly to Attraction A, so I know Attraction A is Sand Boarding and its entry cost is $$. That fills two cells for Attraction A right away.
Step 2: Confirm Attraction C’s type and open time from the morning-only clue
Clue 2 says Sand Bath only opens from 7AM to 9AM, which the game labels as Morning. The clue specifically ties Sand Bath to Attraction C, so Attraction C’s type is Sand Bath and its open time is Morning. That gives me two more cells confirmed. Now I have Attraction A as Sand Boarding with $$, Attraction C as Sand Bath with Morning, and Attraction B still needs its type and open time.
Step 3: Place Attraction B’s type and both of its time slots using the night owls clue
Clue 3 says Air Balloon is perfect for night owls, and it links Attraction B to that type. So Attraction B’s type is Air Balloon. The clue also gives Attraction B two open-time values: Night and Dawn. This is where the slash-separated cell comes in – Attraction B’s open time will contain both Night and Dawn, not one or the other. That matches the solved grid I’m working toward.
Step 4: Confirm Attraction A’s Evening time slot
Clue 4 states that Sand Boarding can be done in the Evening. Since I already know Attraction A is Sand Boarding, this adds Evening to Attraction A’s open time. But looking at the final grid, Attraction A actually has two time values: Evening and Noon. Clue 4 only gives me Evening so far. That means there’s still a second time slot to account for – I’ll need to figure out where Noon comes from.
Step 5: Use the tour-order clue to confirm the remaining time slots
Clue 5 says it’s popular to do Sand Bath right after the Air Balloon tour. This tells me two things. First, Air Balloon (Attraction B) happens before Sand Bath (Attraction C). Since Sand Bath opens in the Morning, Air Balloon must take place at Night or Dawn, both of which happen before Morning in a logical day order. That fits perfectly with the Night / Dawn values I already have for Attraction B.
Second, this clue reinforces that Attraction C’s only open time is Morning, and Attraction B’s open times are Night and Dawn. No new values here, but it confirms the relationship.
Step 6: Deduce the missing Noon time slot for Attraction A
Now I have all three attractions’ types and costs filled in, and open times are almost complete. Attraction B has Night / Dawn, Attraction C has Morning. The only open-time values left in the puzzle are Evening and Noon – and Evening is already assigned to Attraction A from clue 4. That leaves Noon as the only unplaced time value. Since every attraction must have at least one time slot, and Attraction A’s cell already holds Evening, Noon must join it in the same cell. That’s how Attraction A ends up with Evening / Noon.
Step 7: Confirm the remaining cost for Attraction C
Attraction A costs $$, Attraction B costs $. The only cost left is $, which belongs to Attraction C. That matches the starting answer for Attraction B and the most expensive clue for Attraction A. Everything lines up.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
At this point every cell is accounted for. Attraction A is Sand Boarding with $$ and open times Evening and Noon. Attraction B is Air Balloon with $ and open times Night and Dawn. Attraction C is Sand Bath with $ and open time Morning. The initial answer for Attraction B’s cost was $, which is already in place. The final grid confirms all the placements, and no hidden values were needed to complete the solve.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 196
The night owls clue with two time values
Clue 3 says Air Balloon is perfect for night owls and attaches two open times – Night and Dawn – to Attraction B. This can trip players up because most clues in Profile Perfect give a single value per cell. When a clue lists two values for the same subject and trait, they both belong there. Some players might try to pick just one or assume only one is correct, but the solved grid clearly shows both Night and Dawn in Attraction B’s open-time cell. Treating them as alternatives would leave a missing time slot later.
The “right after” clue and how it supports existing placements
Clue 5 says Sand Bath is popular right after Air Balloon. This sounds like a position clue, but since the puzzle doesn’t arrange attractions in a specific order on a timeline, the clue is really about the logical sequence of times. Sand Bath is Morning, so Air Balloon must take place at a time that comes before Morning. Night and Dawn both fit that requirement. The confusion comes from expecting a left-right or neighbor relationship. Instead, it’s a temporal relationship that backs up what clue 3 already told us about Attraction B’s times. Once you see it that way, it’s straightforward.
The most expensive clue and the slash-separated entry cost
Clue 1 says Sand Boarding is the most expensive attraction, and the only two costs are $ and $$. Most players correctly assign $$ to Sand Boarding. The tricky part is that the entry cost column doesn’t have any slash-separated cells – each cost is a single value. So there’s no confusion there. The real challenge is remembering that the open-time column does have slashes, and that’s where the multiple values live. Mixing up which column allows slashes can lead to mistakes.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 196 is a clean solve once you recognize that some open-time cells can hold two values. The initial answer for Attraction B’s cost gives you a strong start, and the direct type clues for each attraction fill in quickly. The trick is not to overthink the “right after” clue – it’s simply confirming that Night and Dawn come before Morning. With those pieces in place, the missing Noon time slot for Attraction A is just a matter of elimination. Grab the answer table from the top of this guide, and you’re all set.
Need help with another level later? Save the level walkthrough index so you can return whenever you need the answer. If you have feedback or ideas, share them in the comments. Good luck and enjoy the puzzle!
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.
More Profile Perfect Guides
Trending Guides

A Visual Dictionary of Profile Perfect Clue Words

How Profile Perfect Balances Direct Clues and Indirect Clues

The cutest logic puzzles in Profile Perfect



