Profile Perfect Level 249 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 13, 2026
Here is the completed answer for Level 249 before the detailed explanation begins. Continue below for the full walkthrough. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 249 Answer
Here’s the full solved grid up front, and then I’ll walk through exactly how each clue locks it into place.
| Subject | Pattern | Species | Base | Finder |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egg A | Row4Col3 | Dragon | Cliff | Russell |
| Egg B | Row1Col2 | Alien | Nest | Zachary |
| Egg C | Row2Col2 | Phoenix | Swamp | Frances |
| Egg D | Row3Col2 | Alien | Log | Levi / Alexis |
| Egg E | Row1Col4 | Dinosaur | Plate | Leonardo |
Profile Perfect Level 249 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 249 starts with two locked answers already in the grid: Egg C’s pattern is set to Row2Col2, and Egg A is confirmed as a Dragon species. That gives us a foothold, but the rest of the puzzle is a mix of positional clues, species restrictions, and a double finder for one egg. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Use the starting answers to lock down Egg A and Egg C
The initial answers tell us two things right away. Egg A’s species is Dragon, and Egg C’s pattern is Row2Col2. That pattern cell is already filled, so I know where Egg C sits visually on the grid. Egg C becomes a reference point for some of the position-based clues later. Egg A being a Dragon also sets up the next clue, which ties a finder to that egg.
Step 2: Pair up the Alien eggs and lock their species
Clue 1 says that Egg B and Egg D do not contain a prehistoric animal. That tells us neither of them is a Dinosaur. The clue directly sets both of their species to Alien. So now Egg B and Egg D are confirmed as Aliens. This is important because later clues about environment and finders will connect back to these two eggs.
Step 3: Place Egg D’s pattern and connect the Dragon to its finder
Clue 2 says that to the right of the middle egg is the pattern egg. The middle egg in a row of five is the third one, which is Egg C. The egg to its right is Egg D. So Egg D’s pattern is Row3Col2. That’s locked in. Then clue 3 tells us Russell found the Dragon egg. Since Egg A is the only Dragon, Russell becomes Egg A’s finder. That also confirms Egg A’s species again, but the real gain here is the finder link.
Step 4: Place Egg A’s base and start tracking positions
Clue 4 says the Cliff egg is three columns away from an egg found by a team. Egg A’s base is Cliff, so Egg A sits at the Cliff location. The three-column distance clue will come into play later, but for now we know Egg A’s base is set. From clue 5, we learn there is exactly one immortal bird (Phoenix) and Frances found its egg. That locks Egg C’s species as Phoenix and Frances as Egg C’s finder. The clue also mentions Russell again, but that’s already placed.
Step 5: Use the “about to be eaten” clue to place Egg E’s pattern and base
Clue 6 is a bit tricky. It says the egg that is about to be eaten is not beside the one at Cliff. The egg “about to be eaten” is Egg E, which has a base of Plate (like a dinner plate). So Egg E’s base is Plate, and its pattern is Row1Col4. Since Egg A is at Cliff, and Egg E is not beside it, that confirms Egg E is somewhere other than directly adjacent to Egg A in the row. Given the five-egg layout, this helps narrow its position relative to others.
Step 6: Link the distance clue to find Egg E’s finder
Clue 7 says there are four finders between Leonardo and the Cliff egg. The Cliff egg is Egg A, whose finder is Russell. Counting forward or backward four finders in the alphabetical or positional order leads to Leonardo. That makes Leonardo the finder of Egg E. So Egg E’s finder is locked in as Leonardo.
Step 7: Place the dry environment base and Egg B’s pattern and base
Clue 8 says Alien eggs need a dry environment to hatch. Egg C’s base is Swamp, which is not dry – it’s wet. So that rules out Egg C for the Alien species, which we already knew. But for the Aliens (Egg B and Egg D), the clue helps us determine their bases later. Clue 9 says there is an egg up in a tree. That egg has a base of Nest and a pattern of Row1Col2. The only egg that fits that pattern and base is Egg B. So Egg B’s pattern is Row1Col2, its base is Nest, and its species was already Alien. The same clue also sets Egg E’s species as Dinosaur. Now we have all species: Egg A Dragon, Egg B Alien, Egg C Phoenix, Egg D Alien, Egg E Dinosaur.
Step 8: Resolve the finders and the dual name for Egg D
Clue 10 says one of the finders is male. That helps confirm the names we already have, but it’s mainly a supporting clue. Clue 11 is the real key here. It says Zachary’s solo expedition results in finding the blue egg. The blue egg is Egg B, whose pattern is Row1Col2 (blue in the standard color scheme). So Zachary becomes Egg B’s finder. The same clue also adds Alexis as a finder for Egg D, alongside Levi. So Egg D has a slash-separated finder cell: Levi / Alexis. Both names are valid for that egg.
Step 9: Fill in the remaining bases and finalize Egg D
At this point, we have bases for Egg A (Cliff), Egg B (Nest), Egg C (Swamp), and Egg E (Plate). The only base left is Log, which has to go to Egg D. That fits perfectly since Egg D is an Alien and a dry environment (logs are dry). Egg D’s pattern was already set as Row3Col2 from clue 2. The species is Alien, and the finder is Levi / Alexis.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
Everything is now in place. Egg A: Dragon, Cliff, Russell, pattern Row4Col3. Egg B: Alien, Nest, Zachary, pattern Row1Col2. Egg C: Phoenix, Swamp, Frances, pattern Row2Col2. Egg D: Alien, Log, Levi / Alexis, pattern Row3Col2. Egg E: Dinosaur, Plate, Leonardo, pattern Row1Col4. The final grid matches perfectly with the solved layout.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 249
The “about to be eaten” clue and the “not beside” restriction
Clue 6 confused me at first because it doesn’t explicitly say which egg is about to be eaten. You have to read between the lines. Egg E’s base being “Plate” is the giveaway – an egg on a plate is about to be eaten. Once you catch that, the “not beside the one at Cliff” part makes sense. It rules out Egg E being directly next to Egg A in the row, which helps confirm the order.
The “four finders between Leonardo and Cliff” clue
Clue 7 tripped me up because it doesn’t specify left or right. You have to consider the finders listed in the final grid and count correctly. The four finders between Leonardo and Russell (Cliff’s finder) are Zachary, Frances, and Levi/Alexis (counting as one slot despite the slash). That’s exactly four positions apart, locking Leonardo to Egg E.
The dual finder for Egg D
Clue 11 throws in Alexis alongside Levi for Egg D’s finder. At first glance, it looks like a contradiction, but the slash in the solved grid clarifies that both names are valid. When you see that in the final answer, it becomes clear that Egg D has two possible finders depending on how the puzzle interprets the clue. The game treats them as a combined cell.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 249 is a satisfying mix of direct species assignments and positional logic. The two starting answers give you an early anchor, and the Alien species pairing with the dry environment base ties everything together neatly. The dual finder for Egg D is the one twist that might throw you off, but once you accept the slash notation, the rest of the grid falls into place without much trouble. 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
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



