Profile Perfect Level 24 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on May 26, 2026
You can find the final answer for Level 24 below. After that, I'll guide you through each step. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 24 Answer
I’ll show you the fully solved grid first, then walk through every clue that leads to it. No spoilers beyond this table until you’re ready.
| Subject | Location | Material | Meaning | Year | Visitor Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Landmark A | Chile | Tuff | Power | 1442 | x1 |
| Landmark B | USA | Copper | Freedom | 1886 | x4 |
| Landmark C | UAE | Glass | Ambition | 2010 | x5 |
| Landmark D | China | Brick | Defense | 1368 | x2 |
| Landmark E | Japan | Wood | Faith | 778 | x3 |
Profile Perfect Level 24 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 24 drops you into a world of five landmarks—A through E—each with a location, material, meaning, year, and visitor count. Three starting answers are already locked in: Landmark C’s location is UAE, Landmark A’s material is Tuff, and Landmark E’s meaning is Faith. Several clues build from there, mixing direct placements, neighbor relationships, and crowd comparisons. Let’s work through them step by step.
Step 1: Lock Landmark B’s year from the 19th century clue
The very first clue says Landmark B was built in the 19th century. That immediately gives us the year 1886—the only 1800s year in the set. I note that Landmark B’s year is now confirmed, and because clue 5 also mentions 1886 (in connection with Landmark A’s crowd), this year will pop up again.
Step 2: Narrow down locations for B, D, and E
Clue 2 tells us Landmarks B, D, and E are not in Chile. That trio must take the remaining three locations: USA, China, and Japan (since Chile belongs to someone else—Landmark A, as we’ll see). The clue doesn’t say exactly which goes where yet, but it rules out Chile for those three, so Chile is left for either Landmark A or C. However, we already know Landmark C is in UAE from the initial answers. So Chile must go to Landmark A. That’s a big piece: Landmark A’s location is Chile.
Step 3: Landmark C’s material and meaning start to fill in
Clue 3: Landmark C is made of Glass. That matches the initial answer for Landmark C’s location? No—location was already UAE. Now we know Landmark C’s material is Glass. Clue 6 says the landmarks for Ambition and Defense are neighbors. The same clue links Landmark A’s location to Chile, which we already have. And it states Landmark C’s meaning is Ambition and Landmark D’s meaning is Defense. So now Landmark C gets Ambition as its meaning. That’s a three‑for‑one: Landmark C now has UAE (location), Glass (material), Ambition (meaning). We still need its year and visitor count.
Step 4: The crowd comparisons lock visitor counts for A, B, D, and C
Clue 4: The Copper landmark is the second most crowded. That tells us Landmark B is Copper (material) and its visitor count is x4 (because “second most crowded” means count x4 – the counts go x1, x2, x3, x4, x5). Clue 5: Landmark A has the least crowd – that’s x1. Clue 11: Landmark B is twice as crowded as Landmark D. Since Landmark B is x4, Landmark D must be x2. Clue 9: Landmark C’s crowd is bigger than Landmark B’s. Landmark B is x4, so Landmark C must be x5 (the only larger count left). That leaves Landmark E with the remaining count: x3. Now we have all visitor counts: A=x1, B=x4, C=x5, D=x2, E=x3.
Step 5: Landmark E’s location and material click
Clue 7 says Landmark E is in Japan. That gives us Landmark E’s location. Then clue 8 adds that Japan’s landmark is made of Wood, so Landmark E’s material is Wood. Already we had Landmark E’s meaning as Faith from the initial answers. So far Landmark E has Japan, Wood, Faith, Visitor Count x3, but no year yet.
Step 6: Link Landmark B’s meaning and its neighbor relationship
Clue 10: The landmark that means Freedom is next to Chile. Chile is Landmark A, so the Freedom landmark must be next to Landmark A. The landmarks are not given a linear order in this puzzle (the grid doesn’t show positions like left/right, only a list). But the clue “next to” here is a bit abstract—it probably means in the list order (A, B, C, D, E) or a geographical neighbor? Actually, the puzzle treats the landmarks as a sequence? In Profile Perfect, “next to” often refers to adjacency in the grid’s row order (A next to B, B next to C, etc.). So if Landmark A is Chile, then “next to” means Landmark B (adjacent in the list) is the Freedom landmark. That locks Landmark B’s meaning as Freedom. We already have Landmark B’s material as Copper, year 1886, location USA (still to confirm), and visitor count x4. Now meaning added.
Step 7: Resolve Landmark D’s year and Landmark A’s meaning
Clue 12 says China’s landmark was made in 1368. Landmark D is China? We haven’t placed China yet. From Step 2, we know B, D, and E are not Chile, and we already have Landmark E=Japan, Landmark B still needs a location (USA or China), Landmark D needs a location (USA or China). The clue says “China’s landmark” – that’s Landmark D or B? Let’s see. The same clue also says “Landmark A’s meaning is Power.” That gives Landmark A the meaning Power. And it confirms Landmark D’s location is China and its year is 1368. So Landmark D is China, year 1368, meaning Defense (from Step 3), material? Not yet. That leaves Landmark B with USA (the only location left). And Landmark B’s location is USA – matches clue 13 which mentions Landmark B’s location as USA indirectly.
Step 8: Fill the remaining materials and years
We have Landmark A material Tuff (initial), Landmark B material Copper, Landmark C material Glass, Landmark E material Wood. The only material left is Brick, which must go to Landmark D. So Landmark D’s material is Brick. Years: Landmark A year? Not yet. Landmark C year? Not yet. Landmark B year 1886, Landmark D year 1368, Landmark E year 778 (from clue 15? Actually clue 15 mentions 778 but indirectly). Clue 13 says Ambition landmark is the newest out of all. Ambition is Landmark C, so its year must be the highest: 2010. That gives Landmark C year 2010. Clue 14 says the one made from Copper (Landmark B) is not beside Wood (Landmark E). In the list order A-B-C-D-E, Landmark B is beside A and C. Landmark E is adjacent to D. Since B and E are not adjacent (B is far from E), that clue just confirms the order and doesn’t change anything. Clue 15 says Freedom’s neighbors were not made in 778. Freedom is Landmark B; its neighbors are A and C. Landmark A’s year? Not yet. Landmark C’s year is 2010, so that’s fine. The remaining year for Landmark A must be 1442 (the only year left). And 1442 is not 778, so the neighbor condition holds. So Landmark A year 1442. That completes the grid.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
By now every cell is filled. Let’s double-check the final grid:
- Landmark A: Chile, Tuff, Power, 1442, x1
- Landmark B: USA, Copper, Freedom, 1886, x4
- Landmark C: UAE, Glass, Ambition, 2010, x5
- Landmark D: China, Brick, Defense, 1368, x2
- Landmark E: Japan, Wood, Faith, 778, x3
All clues are satisfied. The “next to” relationships used in clues 6, 10, 14, and 15 rely on the sequence A-B-C-D-E, which is the natural order of the subjects. No hidden values or slashes appear in this level—everything is a single clear value.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 24
Clue 6: “Landmarks for Ambition and Defense are neighbors”
At first glance, you might think this clue only tells you that two landmarks with those meanings sit next to each other. But it also reveals the meanings themselves: Ambition goes to Landmark C and Defense to Landmark D. Plus it added that Landmark A is in Chile, which was already partly deduced. The trick is noticing that the clue doesn’t just set a neighbor relationship—it directly assigns meanings to specific landmarks (C and D). Keep an eye out for clues that look like positional hints but actually lock down trait values.
Clue 10: “Landmark that means Freedom is next to Chile”
This one tripped me up because we hadn’t placed Freedom yet. But once we knew Chile was Landmark A, “next to” in this puzzle’s ordering means Landmark B (since A and B are adjacent in the list). That gave Landmark B its meaning. If you’re not sure whether “next to” refers to the grid’s row order, the rest of the puzzle confirms it uses the natural A-B-C-D-E sequence. Pay attention to how other neighbor clues (clue 6, clue 14, clue 15) all work with that order.
Clue 15: “Freedom’s neighbors were not made in 778”
This clue seems like a leftover condition, but it actually helps finalize Landmark A’s year. Freedom’s neighbors are Landmarks A and C. We already knew Landmark C’s year (2010), so the only possible year for Landmark A from the remaining set is 1442, which isn’t 778—so the clue holds. If you forget to check it, you might leave Landmark A’s year unconfirmed. It’s a neat example of a clue that validates rather than leads.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 24 is a clean logic puzzle with no hidden values or slashes, relying on a series of direct placements and crowd comparisons. The key is to use the initial answers (UAE, Tuff, Faith) as anchors, then let the neighbor and “second most crowded” clues fill in the rest. The ordering of landmarks matters for the adjacency clues, so keep the sequence A-B-C-D-E in mind. Once you lock Landmark B’s year from the 19th-century hint and Landmark A’s location from the “not in Chile” clue, the rest falls into place like a well‑oiled machine. Happy solving!
Before you move on, bookmark the level walkthrough index in case you need another answer later. Share your thoughts or suggestions in the comments, and have fun with the next level!
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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