Profile Perfect Level 292 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 20, 2026

Here is the final solution for Level 292 before the walkthrough begins. Save it first, then follow the steps below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 292 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 292 Answer

Here’s the complete solved grid first, and then I’ll walk you through how each clue locks it in.

SubjectCar ColorPassengerPassenger ExpressionAnimalWeather
Safari AYellowAmandaShockedRhino / LionSunny
Safari BOliveKellyScaredElephant / TigerStormy
Safari CGrayLarry / DebraCryingT-RexRainy
Safari DRedLarryNauseousHorseSunny
Safari ENavyHelen / SaraAngryBullCloudy

Remember: slashes mean both values belong in that cell. For example, Safari A has both Rhino and Lion as its animals.

Profile Perfect Level 292 Hints And Walkthrough

This safari puzzle starts with two locked answers: Safari A’s car is Yellow and Safari E’s animal is Bull. From there, the clues drop a mix of direct placements, positional hints, and a few slash-filled cells. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Use the initial answers to anchor two safaris

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The puzzle opens with Safari A’s car color set to Yellow and Safari E’s animal set to Bull. That gives us a solid starting point. I noted these down right away before looking at any clues.

Step 2: Set Safari E’s weather and car color from the positional clues

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Clue 2 says Cloudy weather is furthest from the Yellow car. Since Safari A already has the Yellow car, this clue directly tells us that Safari E’s weather is Cloudy. Then clue 3 says one of the two rightmost safaris has the Navy car. The rightmost safaris are D and E, and clue 3 links Safari E’s car color to Navy. So now Safari E has Navy, Cloudy, and Bull – three cells filled.

Step 3: Place Debra and Crying with T‑Rex on Safari C

screenshot

Clue 1 gives us Debra as a passenger on Safari C, and clue 5 adds that Debra kept crying (so the expression is Crying) and that the animal on that safari is a T‑Rex. So Safari C now has passenger Debra, expression Crying, and animal T‑Rex. This clue also ties into the “CGI” flavor, but the placements are what matter.

Step 4: Pin down the big cats – Rhino, Lion, Tiger, and Elephant

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Clue 4 states that Rhino and Lion are not between Tiger and Bull. The clue directly sets Safari A’s animal to Rhino, Safari B’s animal to Tiger, and confirms Safari E’s animal as Bull (already known). Clue 8 adds that Safari A and B both have big cats, but B’s are heavier, which gives Safari A the Lion as well, and Safari B the Tiger again. So Safari A now has both Rhino and Lion (slashed), and Safari B gets Tiger. Clue 9 repeats the Rhino and Tiger placements, just reinforcing. Then clue 12 brings in Elephant for Safari B, saying it’s one of the animals seen during the Storm. This links Safari B’s animal to Elephant (alongside Tiger), and also sets Safari B’s weather to Stormy. So Safari B now has Elephant/Tiger and Stormy.

Step 5: Fill in Safari B’s car, expression, and passenger

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Clue 14 tells us Kelly is trembling, which makes the Olive car tremble too. That directly gives Safari B’s car color as Olive, its passenger as Kelly, its expression as Scared, and its weather as Stormy (already set). So Safari B’s row is mostly locked: Olive car, Kelly, Scared, Elephant/Tiger, Stormy.

Step 6: Set the Shocked and Angry expressions, and confirm Debra’s

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Clue 7 says Shocked and Angry passengers are not neighboring Debra. This clue links Safari A’s expression to Shocked, Safari C’s expression to Crying (Debra’s safari), and Safari E’s expression to Angry. So Safari A gets Shocked, Safari E gets Angry. That fits with Debra on C crying.

Step 7: Add the Red car and Sunny weather

Clue 13 says the Red car does not neighbor Sunny weather. The link gives Safari D’s car color as Red, Safari A’s weather as Sunny, and Safari D’s weather as Sunny. So now Safari A’s weather is Sunny (it already had Yellow car and Shocked expression), and Safari D gets Red car and Sunny weather. Note that both A and D share Sunny – that’s fine.

Step 8: Sort out the two‑female‑passenger safari

Clue 6 is the only clue about female passengers. It says exactly one safari is visited by two female passengers. The links give Safari E’s passengers as Helen and Sara (both female), and Safari C’s passengers as Larry and Debra (one male, one female). So Safari E gets Helen and Sara (slashed), and Safari C gets Larry and Debra (slashed). This also confirms that no other safari has two female passengers – the others will have a single passenger later.

Step 9: Set Safari C’s weather and confirm Safari E’s

Clue 11 says the T‑Rex alone appears in Rain, because others take shelter. This gives Safari C’s weather as Rainy (it already has T‑Rex), and also links Safari E’s weather to Cloudy (already set). So now Safari C’s weather is Rainy.

Step 10: Confirm Safari E’s passenger details

Clue 15 says Helen is blaming Sara for an incident involving their car, which links Safari E’s passengers to Helen and Sara and its car color to Navy (already set). So that ties up the last loose end for Safari E.

Step 11: Solution – Fill the remaining cells by elimination

Now we have almost everything. Let’s see what’s missing:

  • Safari A: passenger and animal (Rhino/Lion and Shocked expression are there, weather Sunny, car Yellow). The only passenger not used yet is Amanda. So Safari A’s passenger is Amanda.
  • Safari B: everything is filled (Olive, Kelly, Scared, Elephant/Tiger, Stormy).
  • Safari C: passenger (Larry/Debra), expression Crying, animal T‑Rex, weather Rainy. Car color? The only color left is Gray (Yellow, Olive, Red, Navy are taken). So Safari C’s car is Gray.
  • Safari D: car Red, weather Sunny, expression? The leftover expression is Nauseous (Shocked, Scared, Crying, Angry are taken). So Safari D’s expression is Nauseous. Animal? Leftover animal is Horse (Rhino/Lion, Elephant/Tiger, T‑Rex, Bull are taken). So Safari D’s animal is Horse. Passenger? We already have Larry on Safari C, but Larry can also be on Safari D – the puzzle allows the same name on multiple safaris. Since no other passenger remains, Safari D’s passenger is Larry.
  • Safari E: all filled (Navy, Helen/Sara, Angry, Bull, Cloudy).

Everything matches the solved grid. Done and done!

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 292

Clue 4: “Rhino and Lion are not between Tiger and Bull”

At first glance this sounds like a positional clue – maybe the animals are in a row and Rhino/Lion can’t be placed between Tiger and Bull. But the actual links just assign Safari A’s animal to Rhino, Safari B’s to Tiger, and Safari E’s to Bull. The phrase “not between” is flavor; the real work is the direct placement. New players might waste time trying to order safaris left to right, but the clue is simpler than it seems.

Clue 6: “Only one safari is visited by two female passengers”

This clue chains a lot of data: it confirms that Safari E has two females (Helen and Sara) and Safari C has a mix (Larry and Debra). But it also links Safari C’s expression to Crying, which we already knew. The tricky part is that Larry appears again on Safari D later – the clue doesn’t forbid that, it just says only one safari has two female passengers. So Safari D with a single male passenger (Larry) is fine. Keep an eye on the exact wording.

Clue 13: “Red car does not neighbor Sunny weather”

Again, this sounds like a adjacency rule, but the links just set Safari D’s car to Red, Safari A’s weather to Sunny, and Safari D’s weather to Sunny. The result is that the Red car itself has Sunny weather – so it’s not “neighboring” Sunny, it is Sunny. That’s a bit of a head‑scratcher, but the clues are telling us where to put the values, not enforcing a spatial constraint.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 292 is mostly a direct‑placement puzzle with a few slash cells that keep things interesting. The key is to trust the clue links even when the wording sounds positional. Start with the initial answers, let each clue add its cells, and use elimination for the leftovers. Once you treat every slashed value as belonging in the same cell, the whole grid falls into place without much guesswork. Happy solving!

Keep the Profile Perfect walkthrough page saved if you want help with future levels. Comments, tips, and suggestions are always welcome below. Good luck on the next challenge!

Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone avatar

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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