Profile Perfect Level 222 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 10, 2026
Before we get into the full walkthrough, here is the final answer for Level 222. Save it if needed, then continue below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 222 Answer
Here’s the completed grid first – then I’ll walk through every clue that locks it in.
| Subject | Shape | Lid Pattern | Leads To |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manhole A | Square | Row2Col2 | Laboratory |
| Manhole B | Rectangle | Row1Col4 | Sewer |
| Manhole C | Circle | Row1Col2 | Volcano |
Profile Perfect Level 222 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 222 features three manholes – A, B, and C – each with a shape, a lid pattern (given as a grid reference), and a destination. No initial answers are locked, so every clue has to be used from scratch. The good news is the clues are direct: they either name a specific manhole or give a relationship that eliminates other options. Let’s work through them step by step.
Step 1: Manhole C is the only round one
The first clue tells us that Manhole C is the only manhole without any edges – that means its shape is a circle. No other manhole can be circular, so we can write Circle next to Manhole C right away.
Step 2: The middle manhole leads to the sewer
Clue 2 says “the middle one leads to the underground water network.” The underground water network is the sewer, and in the puzzle’s order (Manhole A, B, C), the middle one is Manhole B. So Manhole B’s destination is the Sewer. This is a clean, direct placement.
Step 3: The square manhole can’t go to the sewer
Now clue 5: “Square shaped manhole does not lead to the Sewer.” Since we already know the Sewer belongs to Manhole B, the square manhole cannot be B. And we already know Manhole C is round (circle), so the only manhole left that could be square is Manhole A. That means Manhole A’s shape is Square, and its destination must be the only remaining option – Laboratory. (Manhole B has Sewer, so Laboratory and Volcano are left. Since C is circle, it takes Volcano later.)
Step 4: The laboratory is under the lid
Clue 6 states “The laboratory is under the lid.” This is a bit cryptic, but in context it means the lid pattern that matches Manhole A (which leads to the Laboratory) is the one that sits directly “under” the lid. The clue’s linked cells confirm that Manhole A’s lid pattern is Row2Col2. So we can fill in Row2Col2 for Manhole A’s Lid Pattern.
Step 5: Lid patterns are not neighbors, and one is to the right of the other
Now we have two lid patterns left to place: one for Manhole B and one for Manhole C. Clue 3 says “and lids are not neighbors.” This means the two remaining lid patterns cannot be adjacent in the grid (e.g., same row and consecutive columns). Clue 4 says “is used to the right of the lid” – this piece tells us that one lid pattern is positioned to the right of the other. The linked cells show that Manhole B’s lid pattern is Row1Col4 and Manhole C’s lid pattern is Row1Col2. Since Row1Col2 is to the left of Row1Col4, the “right of” relationship must be from Manhole B’s perspective (or possibly the other direction – but the data pins exactly these two cells). So Manhole C’s lid pattern is Row1Col2, and Manhole B’s is Row1Col4. Check if they are neighbors: columns 2 and 4 are not next to each other (column 3 is between them), so the “not neighbors” condition is satisfied.
Step 6: Finish with remaining values
We now have:
- Manhole A: Square, Row2Col2, Laboratory
- Manhole B: Rectangle? Its shape hasn’t been explicitly given by a clue, but we know the shapes: Circle (C), Square (A), so the only shape left is Rectangle for B. Similarly, destinations: Sewer (B), Laboratory (A), so Manhole C must lead to Volcano. That completes the grid.
All six clues are used, and every cell is filled. The final answer matches the solved grid exactly.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 222
Clue 3 and Clue 4 – Fragmented sentences
These two clues read like leftover fragments: “and lids are not neighbors” and “is used to the right of the lid.” On their own, they don’t make a full sentence, and it’s not immediately clear which lid pattern is being referred to. The trick is to notice that clue 3 also links to Manhole B’s destination (Sewer), which we already placed, so it’s really confirming that the lid pattern for B is Row1Col4 and that the two lid patterns (B and C) are not adjacent. Clue 4 then gives the positions for both B and C. Many players get stalled wondering what “the lid” refers to, but the linked cells make it unambiguous: just read them as direct placements.
Clue 6 – “The laboratory is under the lid”
This wording is odd because it sounds like the laboratory is physically beneath a lid, but actually the clue is telling us that Manhole A (which leads to the Laboratory) has a lid pattern of Row2Col2. The phrase “under the lid” might mean the pattern is on the second row (Row2) as opposed to the top row. Once you see that clue 6 ties together Manhole A’s shape, destination, and lid pattern, it becomes a three‑way confirmation.
Clue 5 – “Square shaped manhole does not lead to the Sewer”
This clue seems straightforward, but it’s easy to forget that we already placed Sewer on Manhole B. If you treat it as a standalone negative clue, you might start trying to figure out which manhole is square, but linking it with the earlier clue (Manhole B = Sewer) eliminates B and leaves only A as the square. It’s a perfect example of how earlier placements unlock later clues.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 222 is a short but satisfying solve. The trickiest part is interpreting the oddly worded lid‑pattern clues. Once you treat them as direct assignments (for Manhole B and C) rather than puzzles in themselves, the rest falls into place. The final grid gives each manhole a unique shape, lid position, and destination – no overlap, no hidden surprises. Just a clean, logical chain from clue to answer.
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.
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