Profile Perfect Level 34 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on May 27, 2026

For Level 34, I've placed the final answer below so you can review it quickly before reading the full guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 34 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 34 Answer

I’ll show you the complete solved grid first, then walk through each clue step by step so you can see exactly how the pieces fall into place.

SubjectFoodDrinkPrice
Meal ASandwichCoffee$
Meal BBurgerLemon Tea$
Meal CHot DogCoffee$$
Meal DTacoTea$$

Profile Perfect Level 34 Hints And Walkthrough

This level gives you four meals – Meal A, Meal B, Meal C, and Meal D – and you need to match each one with a food, a drink, and a price. The puzzle starts with a single locked answer: Meal D’s drink is Tea. From there, seven clues build out the rest. Some clues are straightforward, while others rely on positional hints and a couple of repeating values. Let’s work through it one step at a time.

Step 1: Lock in the initial answer and the first direct food clue

screenshot

The very first thing we know is that Meal D’s drink is Tea – that’s given as a starting answer, so I’ll fill that in right away.

Clue 1 says the food in Meal C does not contain vegetables, and the game marks it as a “initial” clue. The linked cell tells us plainly: Meal C’s food is Hot Dog. So now we have:

  • Meal D: Drink = Tea
  • Meal C: Food = Hot Dog

Step 2: Figure out Meal B’s price and drink

screenshot

Clue 2 says “Meal B is cheap but not the cheapest.” That sounds a little tricky, but the game’s link directly sets Meal B’s price to $ (one dollar sign). So Meal B is in the cheaper bracket, but it’s not the single cheapest – since there are two meals with a $ price, that wording just means it isn’t the only cheap one.

Clue 3 tells us only one meal has Lemon Tea as its drink. The linked cells confirm that Meal B’s drink is Lemon Tea, and it also repeats Meal B’s price as $ (reinforcing what we just got). So now we have:

  • Meal B: Price = $, Drink = Lemon Tea

Step 3: Place the Burger and the second Coffee

screenshot

Clue 4 reads “A meal with Coffee has Burger on its right.” This is a positional clue, but the linked cells give us two direct assignments: Meal B’s food is Burger, and Meal C’s drink is Coffee. So even if the positional logic takes a moment to parse, the game is telling us exactly which cells are determined by this clue. I’ll update my grid:

  • Meal B: Food = Burger
  • Meal C: Drink = Coffee

Now Meal B is fully known for now: Food = Burger, Drink = Lemon Tea, Price = $.

Step 4: Pair the cheapest and priciest meals with Coffee

screenshot

Clue 5 says “Cheapest and priciest meals are paired with Coffee.” The linked cells expand that nicely: Meal A’s drink is Coffee, Meal C’s drink is Coffee (which we already have), Meal A’s price is $, and Meal C’s price is $$. So Coffee appears in two meals – the cheapest (Meal A at $) and the priciest (Meal C at $$). That locks in:

  • Meal A: Drink = Coffee, Price = $
  • Meal C: Price = $$

We now know Meal C’s drink and price: Coffee and $$, and its food is already Hot Dog from Step 1. Meal A still needs its food.

Step 5: Confirm the Taco meal and its price

Clue 6 is short: “Meal with Taco has price.” The linked cells tell us Meal D’s food is Taco, and Meal D’s price is $$. That fills in:

  • Meal D: Food = Taco, Price = $$

Meal D already had Tea as its drink, so now it’s complete: Taco, Tea, $$.

Step 6: The Hot Dog meal is not the most affordable

Clue 7 says “Meal with Hot Dog is not the most affordable one.” The linked cells give us Meal B’s food as Burger (already set) and Meal C’s price as $$ (also already set). This clue is a nice confirmation – it tells us that the Hot Dog meal (Meal C) is not the $ price, which matches the $$ we already placed. No new information, but it locks in the reasoning.

Step 7: Fill the remaining food – Sandwich

At this point, we have all drinks and prices filled, and three of the four foods are placed: Burger (Meal B), Hot Dog (Meal C), Taco (Meal D). The only food left is Sandwich, and the only meal without a food assigned is Meal A. So Meal A’s food must be Sandwich. That completes the entire grid:

  • Meal A: Sandwich, Coffee, $
  • Meal B: Burger, Lemon Tea, $
  • Meal C: Hot Dog, Coffee, $$
  • Meal D: Taco, Tea, $$

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 34

Even though the solve path is pretty clean, a couple of clues might trip you up if you’re not reading them carefully.

Clue 4: “A meal with Coffee has Burger on its right”

The phrasing here sounds like a position puzzle – you’d normally expect to figure out which Coffee meal sits left of a Burger meal. But the game’s linked cells simply give you Meal B’s food = Burger and Meal C’s drink = Coffee. That might confuse you if you try to reason out the adjacency yourself. Remember, in Profile Perfect, the clue links tell you the exact answer cells that the clue supports. So treat this clue as a direct assignment: Burger is at Meal B, and Coffee is at Meal C. The positional wording is just flavor; the actual logic the game uses may involve ordering, but the linked cells are what matter.

Clue 2: “Meal B is cheap but not the cheapest”

This is a common phrase that can throw players off because there are two meals with the same $ price. “Not the cheapest” doesn’t mean Meal B is more expensive than everyone else – it just means it isn’t the only cheap one. In a set where two meals are $ and two are $$, “cheap” means $, and “not the cheapest” means there is another meal also at the $ level. The clue’s link makes it clear: Meal B’s price is $. So just trust the link and move on.

Clue 5: “Cheapest and priciest meals are paired with Coffee”

This one is straightforward, but it’s easy to miss that it assigns Coffee to both the cheapest and the priciest meal. That means two different meals get Coffee – Meal A (the cheapest) and Meal C (the priciest). Some players might think Coffee appears only once, but the clue explicitly pairs it with both extremes. The linked cells confirm that, so you’re safe to fill in both.


Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 34 is a satisfying puzzle that shows how a few direct clues and one initial answer can quickly fill a grid. The key was using the first two clues to lock down Meal C’s food and Meal B’s drink and price, then letting the Coffee clues spread out from there. The final step – placing Sandwich – is a simple elimination, so once you have the other three foods, you’re done. If you ever get stuck on a positional clue, remember to check the linked cells; they’re your best friend in these logic grids. Happy puzzling!

Stuck on a future level? Bookmark our full level walkthrough list 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 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.

Leave a Comment

Share your thoughts below. Comments are reviewed before publishing.

Your email will not be shown publicly.

More Profile Perfect Guides

Trending Guides

View All Guides