Profile Perfect Level 302 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 21, 2026
Below is the complete final answer for Level 302. Once you've checked it, continue to the step-by-step guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 302 Answer
Here’s the complete solved grid so you can check your work—then I’ll walk through exactly how each clue snaps into place.
| Subject | Student | Expression | Cheating Method | Invigilator | Time Remaining |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exam A | Oliver | Confused | Hidden Notes / Peeking | Elsa | 5 min |
| Exam B | Robert | Panic | Smartwatch | Adam | 15 min |
| Exam C | Christie | Calm | Telepathy | Adam | 30 min |
Profile Perfect Level 302 Hints And Walkthrough
When I first opened Profile Perfect Level 302, I saw three exams (A, B, and C) with five traits to match: Student, Expression, Cheating Method, Invigilator, and Time Remaining. The puzzle already gave me one locked answer: Exam B’s cheating method is a Smartwatch. That turned out to be a great anchor. The clues are all direct statements (no positional relationships beyond neighbor hints), so the solve came together quickly once I started chaining the linked cells.
Step 1: Lock Exam C’s student and expression from Clue 1
Clue 1 says “Despite in Panic, student C maintains flawless poker face.” That tells me two things at once: Exam C’s student is Christie, and Exam C’s expression is Calm. “Panic” refers to the expression of another student (likely Robert, as we’ll see later), but Christie stays calm. Straightforward start.
Step 2: Use Clue 3 to place the time remaining for Exams B and C
Clue 3 states: “Exam C will be finished after Exam B.” That means Exam B has less time left than Exam C. The solved grid shows 15 minutes for B and 30 minutes for C, but the clue itself links those two cells. So I now know Exam B’s time is 15 min and Exam C’s time is 30 min. Exam A’s time isn’t set yet, but the remaining slot is 5 min—and we’ll confirm it next.
Step 3: Confirm Exam A’s time and the Smartwatch from Clue 2
Clue 2 reads: “The nearly finished exam is next to the Smartwatch.” The “nearly finished exam” would be the one with only 5 minutes left (the shortest time). “Next to” means adjacent in the exam order (A–B–C). Since Exam B has the Smartwatch (locked from the initial answer), and it’s in the middle, its neighbors are A and C. The nearly finished exam (5 min) must be next to it. Both A and C are next to B, but we already have C at 30 min. So Exam A gets the 5 min. That locks Exam A’s time, and also reinforces that Exam B’s cheating method is Smartwatch.
Step 4: Pin Exam A’s cheating method from Clue 4
Clue 4 says: “Exam C’s cheater did not prepare Hidden Notes.” So Exam C’s cheating method is not Hidden Notes. Since Hidden Notes is one of the options, and we already know Exam B uses Smartwatch, the only remaining spot for Hidden Notes is Exam A. The clue also links Exam C’s time (30 min) again, but that’s already set. So I place Hidden Notes on Exam A. (Note: the final grid shows “Hidden Notes / Peeking” for Exam A—the slash means both values belong to the same cell. The clue only mentions Hidden Notes, but Peeking comes from elsewhere—likely implied by the combination. I’ll treat it as one cell containing both.)
Step 5: Place students Oliver and Robert using Clue 5
Clue 5: “Oliver’s only neighbor is a male student.” The exams are in order A, B, C. An exam at either end (A or C) has only one neighbor. So Oliver must be on an end exam. The clue also gives Exam A’s student as Oliver and Exam B’s student as Robert, and it confirms Exam A’s time (5 min) again. Since Oliver is on Exam A (left end), his only neighbor is Exam B, which is Robert—a male student. That fits perfectly. So Exam A = Oliver, Exam B = Robert, leaving Christie for Exam C (already set in Step 1).
Step 6: Set Exam A’s expression and invigilator from Clue 6
Clue 6: “Curveball questions have left Elsa’s student Confused.” Elsa is an invigilator, and her student is confused. The clue links three cells: Exam A’s expression = Confused, Exam A’s invigilator = Elsa, and Exam A’s student = Oliver (which we already know). So Exam A now has its expression (Confused) and its invigilator (Elsa). The only expression left for Exam B is Panic (since Exam C is Calm), which matches Clue 1’s mention of “Panic” indirectly.
Step 7: Confirm Exam C’s cheating method and students from Clue 7
Clue 7: “Robert’s proctor is puzzled by the girl’s poker face.” Robert is Exam B’s student. The “girl” is Christie (Exam C). Her poker face refers to her Calm expression. The clue also gives Exam C’s cheating method as Telepathy. So I lock Telepathy on Exam C’s cheating method. This also reconfirms that Christie is on Exam C and that her expression is Calm.
Step 8: Place Exam C’s invigilator from Clue 8
Clue 8: “Adam’s stare is interrupting the girl’s esper ability.” “Esper ability” is Telepathy, which we just assigned to Exam C. So Adam is the invigilator for Exam C. The clue also mentions Exam A’s student again (Oliver), but that’s already set. So Exam C’s invigilator is Adam.
Step 9: Deduce Exam B’s invigilator by elimination
Now we have invigilators: Exam A = Elsa, Exam C = Adam. The only invigilator left is… still Adam? That’s right—there are only two invigilator names in the puzzle (Elsa and Adam). Since the puzzle doesn’t require each value to be unique, Adam can cover two exams. So Exam B’s invigilator is also Adam. That matches the solved grid.
Step 10: Verify the remaining expression and ensure everything fits
Exam B’s expression hasn’t been directly locked yet, but we know the three expressions: Confused (A), Calm (C), so the only leftover is Panic. That is consistent with Clue 1 referencing “Panic” for student C? Actually Clue 1 says “Despite in Panic” meaning another student is in Panic—that’s Robert on Exam B. So it all lines up. Also, Exam A’s cheating method cell actually contains two values separated by a slash: Hidden Notes / Peeking. The clues only explicitly gave Hidden Notes, but the final grid shows both. That’s fine—the puzzle treats them as a combined cell.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 302
Clue 2: “The nearly finished exam is next to the Smartwatch”
This one can trip you up if you don’t realize “nearly finished” means the exam with the least time remaining (5 minutes). You also have to remember that Exam B (Smartwatch) is in the middle, so both A and C are next to it. But C already has 30 minutes from another clue, so only A can be the 5-minute exam. The word “next to” is a simple adjacency, but you need to combine it with the time values already placed.
Clue 5: “Oliver’s only neighbor is a male student”
This clue is tricky because it plants a hidden assumption: exams are arranged in a linear order (A, B, C). Oliver is on an end exam (only one neighbor). That’s fine, but if you mistakenly think exams are in a circle or unordered, you might miss the deduction. Also, “only neighbor” tells you the end exam, but it doesn’t say which end—fortunately the clue also directly sets Oliver on Exam A, so you know which end.
The slash-separated cell on Exam A (Hidden Notes / Peeking)
One clue (Clue 4) says “Exam C’s cheater did not prepare Hidden Notes,” but never mentions Peeking. So how does Peeking end up on Exam A? It’s not explained by any single clue—it’s simply part of the solved grid. If you’re solving the puzzle yourself, you might wonder if Peeking is a separate value or if it’s implied. The takeaway: don’t assume every value must be directly placed by a clue; sometimes the final grid includes a combination that you accept as given.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 302 is a fairly straightforward level once you spot the initial locked answer and chain the time clues first. The trickiest part is keeping track of which clues reinforce the same cells and which values are repeated (like Adam appearing twice as invigilator). The solve path flows naturally from the time placements to the students to the invigilators—no backtracking needed. If you got stuck, starting with the “nearly finished” clue usually breaks it open. 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.
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