Profile Perfect Level 259 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 13, 2026
Before we get into the full walkthrough, here is the final answer for Level 259. Save it if needed, then continue below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 259 Answer
Here’s the completed grid for Profile Perfect Level 259, with the full walkthrough right after — so you can jump straight to the solution or follow the reasoning step by step.
| Subject | King | Location | Flag | Built Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Castle A | Henry | Mountain | Green | 1103 |
| Castle B | Khan | Beach | Yellow | 1536 |
| Castle C | Julius | Forest | Red | 953 |
| Castle D | Alex | Plains | Blue | 1207 |
Profile Perfect Level 259 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 259 gives you four castles — A, B, C, and D — and four traits: the king’s name, the castle’s location, its flag color, and the year it was built. Right from the start, the puzzle locks in two answers: Castle D’s king is Alex, and Castle A’s flag is green. That gives you a solid foothold, but the rest of the grid fills in through a mix of direct statements, position hints, and a couple of clues that ask you to read between the lines. Let’s work through it.
Step 1: Lock in Castle B’s location and yellow flag
Clue 1 says Castle B is located at the end of the coast, so its location must be Beach. Clue 2 adds that the green and yellow castles are very close to each other — and since we already know Castle A’s flag is green, Castle B’s flag has to be yellow. That gives us:
- Castle B: Location = Beach, Flag = Yellow.
Step 2: Identify the Red Castle and King Julius
Clue 4 tells us the red castle is ruled by a charismatic king named Julius. That’s a direct hit — Castle C gets Flag = Red and King = Julius. So far so good.
Step 3: Place Alex and determine Castle D’s flag and location
Clue 3 says Alex holds no power in the red castle. Alex is already locked as Castle D’s king, so Castle D cannot be red. The same clue also directly sets Castle D’s flag to blue. Then Clue 6 steps in: the blue castle is located in the grassland — which the puzzle calls “Plains.” So Castle D’s location is Plains. Now we have:
- Castle D: King = Alex, Flag = Blue, Location = Plains.
Step 4: Use the “faster to visit” clue to assign Henry and Khan
Clue 5 says it’s faster for Henry to visit Khan than to visit Julius. Henry is Castle A’s king (we’ll confirm that in a moment), and Julius is Castle C’s king. The only way for Henry to reach Khan faster than Julius is if Khan’s castle is closer than Julius’s. Since we already know Castle D’s king is Alex, Khan must be Castle B’s king. The clue also links Castle A’s king to Henry and Castle C’s king to Julius, so:
- Castle A: King = Henry
- Castle B: King = Khan
- Castle C: King = Julius (already set)
Step 5: Interpret the Latin year and the mountain castle’s neighbor
Clue 7 mentions that atop Henry’s castle, the build year appears in Latin: MCIII, which equals 1103. So Castle A’s built year is 1103. Then Clue 8 says the mountain castle’s right neighbor is the most recently built. This clue links several things at once. First, Castle A’s location is Mountain. Second, in the puzzle’s order (A, B, C, D left to right), Castle A’s right neighbor is Castle B. So Castle B must be the most recently built — that year is 1536. The same clue also reconfirms Castle A’s built year as 1103 and Castle B’s king as Khan. So we now have:
- Castle A: Location = Mountain, Built Year = 1103
- Castle B: Built Year = 1536
Step 6: Finish with the Forest castle and the final built year
Clue 9 says the castle in the forest is the most ancient one. The forest location belongs to Castle C (because the clue links Castle C’s location to Forest and its built year to 953). That makes Castle C’s built year 953 — the smallest number, so it’s the oldest. The same clue also confirms Castle A’s built year, Castle B’s location (Beach), and Castle D’s location (Plains). At this point, only Castle D’s built year is missing. The solved grid shows it must be 1207 — the only year left. And that finishes the puzzle.
Solution: Fill in Castle D’s built year
With all other years assigned, Castle D’s built year is 1207. The final grid matches perfectly with every clue.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 259
“Faster for Henry to visit Khan than to visit Julius”
This clue can trip you up because it doesn’t directly say who Khan is. Instead, it implies a distance relationship. Since Henry is at Castle A and Julius is at Castle C, the only way Henry can reach Khan faster is if Khan is at Castle B — the nearest neighbor. If you already know Alex is at Castle D, then Khan must be at Castle B. The clue is easy to overthink, but once you see that Castle D’s king is taken, the logic becomes simple.
“Mountain castle’s right neighbor is the most recently built”
This clue assumes you know the order of the castles. The puzzle doesn’t explicitly list them in a row, but the subjects are given as Castle A, B, C, D — that’s the natural left-to-right order in the grid. So Castle A’s right neighbor is Castle B. The “most recently built” part means the largest year. Castle B’s built year turns out to be 1536, and the clue also confirms Castle A’s location as Mountain. If you mistakenly think the order is different, you might place the mountain castle somewhere else. Sticking with the alphabetical order is key.
“Most ancient one” for the forest castle
Clue 9 says the castle in the forest is the most ancient, which means it has the smallest built year. But the clue also bundles several other confirmations — Castle A’s built year, Castle B’s location, and Castle D’s location — all in one linked list. It’s easy to miss that the “most ancient” part is giving you Castle C’s year directly. The year 953 is obviously lower than 1103 and 1536, so it’s a clean placement once you treat the whole clue as a package.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 259 is a straightforward castle-themed puzzle once you recognize the built-in order of the castles and pay attention to the “faster to visit” hint. The initial answers give you a strong start, and each clue builds on the next — no hidden values, no split cells, just clean deductions. The trickiest part is reading the position clues correctly, but as long as you treat Castle A, B, C, D as a left-to-right line, everything falls into place. Happy solving!
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



