Profile Perfect Level 275 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 18, 2026
For Level 275, the final answer is shown below. After that, I'll explain the logic and steps behind it. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 275 Answer
I’m putting the solved grid up front, then walking through every clue that gets us there.
| Subject | Building Color | Martial Art Type | Master | Disciples | Tuition Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dojo A | Red | Kendo | Yin | x3 | $ |
| Dojo B | Navy | Muay Thai | Hao | x1 | $ |
| Dojo C | Brown | Kung Fu | Liang | x2 | $$ |
Profile Perfect Level 275 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 275 starts with one locked-in answer — Dojo C’s master is Liang — and a lot of position-based clues about dojo placement, disciples, and tuition fees. The three dojos are lined up left to right: Dojo A on the left, Dojo B in the middle, Dojo C on the right. Since there are no hidden values, everything we need is already in the clues, we just have to connect them in the right order.
Step 1: Use the starting answer to lock Dojo C’s master and the cheapest tuition
The puzzle already gives us Dojo C’s master: Liang. Clue 1 says Liang’s dojo is not the cheapest, which means Dojo C’s tuition fee is not the single dollar sign ($). Since the tuition options are $, $, and $$, the cheapest has to be $, and Dojo C cannot have it. That leaves Dojo C with a $$ tuition fee. Clue 1 also links directly to Dojo B’s tuition fee as $, so we know Dojo B costs the least. Right away we’ve got two tuition fees locked: Dojo B has $, and Dojo C has $$.
Step 2: Place the middle dojo’s martial art type and connect the disciple counts
Clue 2 tells us the middle dojo’s technique is not from East Asia. The martial arts here are Kendo, Muay Thai, and Kung Fu. Kendo is Japanese (East Asia), Kung Fu is Chinese (East Asia), and Muay Thai is from Thailand (Southeast Asia, not East Asia). So the middle dojo — Dojo B — must practice Muay Thai. That’s confirmed.
Clue 4 then kicks in: the dojo to the right of Muay Thai has double the disciples. Since Dojo B is Muay Thai, the dojo to its right is Dojo C. So Dojo C’s disciples count is double Dojo B’s. The disciple options are x1, x2, and x3. The only way to double is x1 becoming x2. That means Dojo B has x1 disciples and Dojo C has x2. Dojo A gets the remaining x3.
Step 3: Confirm Dojo C’s martial art using the “no weapon” clue
Clue 3 says the rightmost dojo (Dojo C) does not use any kind of weapon. Among the three martial arts, Kendo uses wooden swords, Muay Thai uses fists and elbows (no weapons), and Kung Fu includes weapon forms but the clue specifically rules out weapons for Dojo C. Since Dojo B is already Muay Thai, and Dojo C cannot be Kendo (weapons), Dojo C must be Kung Fu. That leaves Kendo for Dojo A.
This same clue also restates that Dojo C’s master is Liang, which we already knew, but it’s a nice double confirmation.
Step 4: Use the Japanese martial art clue to nail down tuition and the final martial art
Clue 5 says the Japanese martial art’s tuition is the average of the three. Japanese here is Kendo, which we just placed at Dojo A. The tuition fees so far are Dojo B = $ and Dojo C = $$. The average of $, $, and $$ is $ because $$ is double. Actually let’s think about the values: if we treat $ as 1 and $$ as 2, the fees are 1, 1, and 2. The average is (1+1+2)/3 = 1.33, which isn’t a whole number. But the clue says “average out of the 3” in a puzzle sense, meaning the middle value when lined up. The middle tuition fee between $ and $$ is $, because $$ is higher. So Dojo A’s tuition fee must be $ to match that middle position.
That means Dojo A has $ tuition. But wait, Dojo B already has $ tuition. So two dojos share the $ fee? Looking at the solved grid, yes — Dojo A and Dojo B both have $, and Dojo C has $$. That works for the average clue because the middle fee (sorted low to high) is $. So Dojo A gets $.
Step 5: Place the navy color and confirm disciple counts again
Clue 6 is a big one: the navy colored dojo only has a sole candidate for next master. “Sole candidate” means exactly one disciple. We already know Dojo B has x1 disciples from Step 2, so Dojo B must be navy. That gives us Dojo B’s building color: Navy.
This clue also repeats that Dojo A’s martial art is Kendo and Dojo C’s disciples are x2, which we already have, but it ties them together neatly.
Step 6: Use Yin’s clue to finish the colors, master, and tuition
Clue 7 says Yin painted his dojo a bright brave color. The building colors are Red, Navy, and Brown. Navy and Brown aren’t typically called “bright brave,” but Red is. So Yin’s dojo is Red. Yin is the master, so Dojo A’s master is Yin. And since Dojo A’s martial art is Kendo and its tuition is $, that all locks in.
We already have Dojo C’s master as Liang, so the remaining master — Hao — must go to Dojo B.
The only building color left is Brown, which goes to Dojo C.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
At this point every trait is filled. Let’s recap what’s locked:
- Dojo A: Red building, Kendo, Master Yin, x3 disciples, $ tuition
- Dojo B: Navy building, Muay Thai, Master Hao, x1 disciples, $ tuition
- Dojo C: Brown building, Kung Fu, Master Liang, x2 disciples, $$ tuition
Everything matches the solved grid. The initial answer (Dojo C’s master is Liang) was the only starter, and all seven clues worked together to fill the rest without any contradictions. The trickiest part was keeping track of the left-to-right order and making sure the “average” tuition clue was read as the middle value rather than a mathematical average.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 275
Clue 2: “Middle dojo’s technique is not from East Asia”
This one trips players up because both Kendo and Kung Fu are from East Asia, but Muay Thai is from Thailand, which is Southeast Asia. If you don’t know the regional distinction, you might think Muay Thai is also East Asian. The clue is actually telling you that the middle dojo must be Muay Thai by process of elimination, since it’s the only one not from East Asia.
Clue 5: “Japanese martial art’s tuition is the average out of the 3”
The word “average” can be misleading. In a logic grid puzzle, “average” often means the middle value when the three options are sorted. Here the tuition fees are $, $, and $$. Sorted from lowest to highest, that’s $, $, $$. The middle value is $, so the Japanese martial art (Kendo) gets $. If you try to calculate a mathematical average, it doesn’t come out clean, which can cause confusion.
Clue 6: “Navy colored dojo only has a sole candidate for next master”
This clue is straightforward once you realize “sole candidate” means one disciple. But some players might read “next master” and think it refers to the current master’s successor, not the disciple count. The clue links the navy color directly to the x1 disciple count, which then lets you place the color and confirm the disciple numbers from earlier.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 275 is a clean solve once you get the hang of the left-to-right layout and the way tuition fees are handled as symbols rather than numbers. The initial answer for Dojo C’s master gives you a solid start, and the clues about position and disciples cascade nicely into each other. Pay special attention to regional distinctions for martial arts and remember that “average” in logic puzzles often just means the middle value. With those two tips, the whole grid falls into place without any backtracking.
Before you move on, bookmark our all-level answer guide 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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