Profile Perfect Level 290 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 20, 2026
Below is the saved-answer section for Level 290. After that, I'll show you how to solve it from start to finish. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 290 Answer
I’ll show you the full solved grid first, then walk through every clue that locks it in. Spoilers ahead!
| Subject | Person | Highlight 1 | Highlight 2 | Highlight 3 | Number of Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Itinerary A | Lina | Beach | Supermarket / Oasis | Cruise | 5 |
| Itinerary B | Marco | Museum | Church | Mountain | 10 |
| Itinerary C | Yuki | Jungle | River | Castle | 7 |
| Itinerary D | Omar / Tara | Desert | Playground | Cave | 12 |
Profile Perfect Level 290 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 290 starts with one locked answer (Itinerary C belongs to Yuki) and a handful of clues that tie together multiple cells at once. The twist is that two cells hold two values each: Itinerary A’s Highlight 2 has both Supermarket and Oasis, and Itinerary D’s Person has both Omar and Tara. That means the puzzle is more about matching the right highlights and days than about picking a single name. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Lock Yuki’s itinerary and clue 1’s day count
The very first thing the puzzle gives us is that Itinerary C’s person is Yuki. That’s the only initial answer. Clue 1 then tells us Yuki’s vacation runs from Monday to Sunday – that’s exactly 7 days. So we can fill in Itinerary C – Person = Yuki and Itinerary C – Number of Days = 7.
Step 2: Pin down Itinerary A with direct clues
Clue 3 says Itinerary A starts from the shore and finishes on a ship. That directly gives us its first and third highlights: Beach for Highlight 1 and Cruise for Highlight 3. Clue 9 adds that Lina packs her best bikini, which means Itinerary A’s person is Lina. So now we have three cells for Itinerary A: Person = Lina, Highlight 1 = Beach, Highlight 3 = Cruise.
Step 3: Itinerary B’s religious activity and the second‑longest clue
Clue 2 tells us Itinerary B includes a plan for a religious activity, so Itinerary B – Highlight 2 = Church. Clue 4 reveals that the second‑longest itinerary is next to the one that visits a Beach. The Beach belongs to Itinerary A, so the second‑longest itinerary must be right next to A. Since the grid order is A, B, C, D, the nearest neighbor is Itinerary B. And what’s the second‑longest duration? Looking at the numbers we’ll eventually have (5, 10, 7, 12), the second longest is 10. So Itinerary B – Number of Days = 10. This also confirms that A and B are adjacent, which fits.
Step 4: Marco and the museum – linking B and D
Clue 7 says Marco dedicates the first day for provenance research. That means Itinerary B’s person is Marco and Itinerary B – Highlight 1 = Museum. It also mentions that the Desert is the place where Omar and his wife first met – so Itinerary D – Highlight 1 = Desert (which we’ll come back to later).
Step 5: The jungle castle and the shortest itinerary
Clue 8: “A hidden medieval structure lies deep within the Jungle.” That gives us Itinerary C – Highlight 1 = Jungle and Itinerary C – Highlight 3 = Castle. Now we already have C’s days as 7, so everything for C except Highlight 2 is set.
Clue 12 says the shortest itinerary visits the Supermarket. The shortest duration is 5 days, and that belongs to Itinerary A (we know A’s days from later logic, but we can deduce it’s the shortest among 5, 10, 7, 12). So Itinerary A – Number of Days = 5 and Itinerary A – Highlight 2 includes Supermarket. But wait – clue 5 also says the mystical Oasis is not on the right half, which places Oasis in Itinerary A as well. So A’s Highlight 2 contains both Supermarket and Oasis – that’s a slash‑separated cell.
Step 6: Omar, Tara, and the playground and cave
Clue 6: “Omar and his wife plan to visit the Desert where they first met.” That directly puts Omar in Itinerary D’s person and Desert as D’s Highlight 1 (already noted). Clue 10 adds that Tara prioritizes finding the best activity for her little one, so Tara also goes into Itinerary D’s person (making the slash) and Playground becomes Itinerary D – Highlight 2.
Clue 11: “Itinerary B’s 3rd highlight has less oxygen than Itinerary D’s.” This links three cells at once: Itinerary B – Highlight 3 = Mountain, Itinerary D – Highlight 3 = Cave, and Itinerary D – Highlight 2 = Playground (already placed). So now D’s highlights are fully filled: Desert, Playground, Cave. And B’s Highlight 3 is Mountain, completing B.
Step 7: The final missing highlight – River
At this point, all cells are filled except Itinerary C’s Highlight 2. The remaining highlight from the set (Beach, Supermarket/Oasis, Cruise, Museum, Church, Mountain, Jungle, Castle, Desert, Playground, Cave) is River. So Itinerary C – Highlight 2 = River. That completes the grid.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
Nothing else is needed. Every subject now has a full row. The numbers of days line up: A = 5, B = 10, C = 7, D = 12. The longest (12) is D, and the shortest (5) is A – which confirms clue 4’s “second longest” as B next to A. All clues are satisfied, and the dual values in A’s Highlight 2 and D’s Person are correctly recorded.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 290
The “right half” clue for the Oasis
Clue 5 says, “The search for the mystical Oasis is not on the right half.” This can be confusing because the grid doesn’t have a natural left/right split – the subjects are listed in a single column. The clue is actually referring to the order of the itineraries: the left half is Itineraries A and B, the right half is C and D. So Oasis must be in A or B. The clue then links directly to Itinerary A’s Highlight 2 as Oasis and to Itinerary B’s Highlight 2 as Church. So if you interpret “right half” as the later columns, you might try to put Oasis in C or D, but the linked cells override that guesswork.
The “less oxygen” clue connecting Mountain and Cave
Clue 11 sounds like a riddle about altitude – Mountain has less oxygen than Cave, which seems backwards (mountains are high, caves are low). But the puzzle doesn’t care about real‑world logic; it’s just a flavor text that links three cells. The real purpose is to confirm that B’s third highlight is Mountain, D’s third is Cave, and also to double‑confirm D’s second highlight as Playground. Many players get stuck trying to figure out which is actually higher, when the answer is simply to trust the linked cells.
The slash‑separated person in Itinerary D
Seeing both Omar and Tara in the same cell might throw you off – you might think you need to choose one. But clue 6 says “Omar and his wife” and clue 10 says “Tara prioritizes…” – both are valid, and the solved grid shows they share the slot. If you try to pick only one, you’ll miss that both are correct. The game allows multiple values in a cell, so just accept the slash.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 290 is a clean, clue‑driven puzzle once you get comfortable with the dual‑value cells. The key is to let the initial locked answer (Yuki) and the two “beach” clues (clue 3 and clue 4) anchor A and B early. After that, it’s mostly a matter of filling in highlights from the remaining clues – the jungle castle, the desert, the playground, and the mountain‑cave pair. The “shortest” and “second longest” clues lock the day counts into place. By the time you reach the last empty cell (C’s Highlight 2), only River remains. Happy solving!
Stuck again later? Return to our level guide page for more answers and walkthroughs. If you have comments, suggestions, or feedback, leave them below. Good luck!
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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