Profile Perfect Level 345 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 25, 2026
The final solution for Level 345 comes first for easy saving. Then, I'll walk through the solving process in order. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 345 Answer
I’ll show you the completed grid first, then walk through each clue that locks it all together.
| Subject | Type | Cause | Origin | Creatures Nearby | Depth (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ship A | Pirate | Storm | Portugal | Manta Ray | 343 |
| Ship B | Cargo | Sea Monster | US | Shark | 872 |
| Ship C | Cruise | Iceberg | Norway | Whale | 166 |
| Ship D | Submarine | Fire Onboard | China | Crab | 2205 |
| Ship E | Warship | Torpedo | France | Turtle | 980 |
Profile Perfect Level 345 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 345 starts with two locked answers: Ship D is a Submarine, and Ship B is from the US. The rest of the grid fills in through a mix of depth comparisons, neighbor relationships, and cause‑and‑effect clues. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Lock the US ship’s depth and find its neighbors
Clue 1 tells us that the US ship (Ship B) sank at a depth closest to the Burj Khalifa’s height – that’s 872 meters. So Ship B’s depth is 872. Clue 7 then adds that the ships next to the one at 872m are all at shallower depths. Since Ship B is at 872, the ships on either side (Ship A and Ship C) must have depths less than 872. We don’t have exact numbers yet, but we know they’re shallower.
Step 2: Place the French ship and its cause
Clue 2 says France’s vessel is not neighboring the American one. So Ship E (France) cannot be next to Ship B. That means Ship E must be either at the far left or far right of the lineup. Clue 6 drops the cause: the French ship sank after a torpedo hit. Ship E’s cause is Torpedo. Also, Clue 3 tells us that the ship sinking at almost 1km depth is next to the Submarine. “Almost 1km” is 980 meters – that matches Ship E’s depth from the solved grid. So Ship E is at depth 980 and is next to Ship D, the Submarine. That confirms Ship E is next to Ship D. Since Ship E cannot be next to Ship B, and Ship D is somewhere in the middle, the lineup starts to shape up: Ship B (US) is not next to Ship E, so Ship E must be on the far right with Ship D to its left, or far left with Ship D to its right.
Step 3: Use the Cargo ship clue to link several facts
Clue 9 says the Cargo ship’s crew encountered a Kraken (Sea Monster) and met their doom. That means the Cargo ship’s cause is Sea Monster, and the depth of the ship that sank due to that event is 2205 meters (from the same clue). So Ship B (US, depth 872) is not the Cargo ship because its depth is 872. The Cargo ship’s depth is 2205 – that’s Ship D’s depth. Wait, the solved grid shows Ship D’s depth is 2205. But Ship D is a Submarine, not Cargo. Let’s read Clue 9 carefully: “Cargo ship’s crew encountered Kraken and met their doom” – that sets Ship B.Type = Cargo (from the initial answer? Actually no, initial answer only gave Ship D.Type = Submarine and Ship B.Origin = US. So Clue 9 must assign Ship B as Cargo? Let’s check the linked cells: clue 9 links Ship B.Type = Cargo, Ship B.Cause = Sea Monster, and Ship D.Depth = 2205. So indeed, Ship B is the Cargo ship, its cause is Sea Monster, and Ship D’s depth is 2205. That makes sense: Ship B is Cargo, depth 872, but the clue also gives Ship D’s depth. So Ship D (Submarine) is at 2205 meters.
Step 4: Determine the positions using neighbor clues
Now we know:
- Ship B (US, Cargo, Sea Monster, depth 872)
- Ship D (Submarine, depth 2205)
- Ship E (France, Torpedo, depth 980, next to Ship D)
Since Ship E is next to Ship D, and Ship B is not next to Ship E, Ship D cannot be right next to Ship B either? Actually, Ship D could be next to Ship B as long as Ship E isn’t also next to Ship B. The lineup has five ships. Let’s list possible orders. We have Ship B somewhere. Ship D and Ship E are adjacent. The shallower‑than‑872 rule (Clue 7) says ships next to Ship B (the 872m ship) are shallower. That applies to Ship A and Ship C, not Ship D or E necessarily. Ship D is at 2205 (deeper than 872) and Ship E at 980 (deeper than 872 also? 980 > 872, so actually deeper). So Ship D and Ship E cannot be adjacent to Ship B because they are deeper. Therefore, Ship B must have only shallower neighbors – that means Ship D and Ship E cannot be next to Ship B. So Ship B is isolated from the deeper ships. That suggests Ship B is at one end or the other, with only one neighbor (the shallower one). But we have two shallower ships: Ship A (343) and Ship C (166). Both are shallower than 872. So Ship B could be in the middle with one neighbor shallower on each side (A and C), or at an end with one shallower neighbor. But if Ship B were in the middle, it would have two neighbors – both must be shallower, which is fine. However, Ship D and Ship E are deeper, so they cannot be neighbors of Ship B. That means Ship B cannot be between D and E. So the deeper pair (D and E) must be on the opposite side of the lineup from B.
Let’s test: If Ship B is at position 1 (leftmost), then its only neighbor is position 2, which must be shallower. That could be Ship A or Ship C. The deeper pair D and E would occupy positions 4 and 5 or 3 and 4, but we also have to fit the other ships. Clue 3 says Ship E (980) is next to Submarine (Ship D). So D and E are a pair. And Clue 5 says the Asian watercraft (China, Ship D) is next to the ship with a mammal nearby (Whale – that’s Ship C). So Ship D is next to Ship C. That means Ship C is adjacent to Ship D. Now we have a chain: Ship C next to Ship D next to Ship E. So the three ships C, D, E are in consecutive order. And Ship B cannot be next to either D or E, so Ship B must be on the far end of the chain, separated by at least one ship. The only way is to have Ship B at one end, then Ship A (or whatever) between B and the C-D-E block? But we have five ships total: A, B, C, D, E. The block C-D-E takes three consecutive spots. The remaining two spots (A and B) must fill the other two positions. Since Ship B cannot be next to D or E, Ship B must be at the opposite end of the lineup from the D-E side. That gives us two possible orders:
Option 1: B – A – C – D – E
Option 2: A – B – C – D – E
Check option 2: B is at position 2, its neighbors are A (position 1) and C (position 3). Both must be shallower than 872. Is C shallower? Yes, C depth 166. A depth 343. Good. B is not next to D or E. C is next to D? Yes, position 3 and 4. D next to E? Yes. And Ship D (China) next to Ship C (Whale) – good. So option 2 works. Option 1: B at position 1, neighbor only A at position 2 (shallower), but then C is at position 3, which is next to B? No, B’s only neighbor is A. C is not next to B in option 1? Actually positions: 1:B, 2:A, 3:C, 4:D, 5:E. Then C is adjacent to A (position 2) and D (position 4). B’s only neighbor is A. That’s fine, but does the clue “France’s vessel is not neighboring the American one” hold? In option 1, Ship E (France) is at position 5, not next to B (position 1) – good. Clue 5 says Asian watercraft (China, Ship D) is next to the ship with a mammal (Whale, Ship C) – positions 4 and 3, yes. So both options seem possible at this point. We need more clues.
Step 5: Use the Storm and Iceberg distance clue
Clue 8: The ship that sank due to Storm is 2 columns away from Iceberg. Storm is Ship A’s cause (from solved grid). Iceberg is Ship C’s cause. So Ship A and Ship C are two columns apart. In option 2 (A, B, C, D, E), A is position 1, C is position 3 – that’s two apart? Positions 1 and 3 have one column between them (position 2), so they are two columns away? Usually “2 columns away” means there are two columns between them? The phrasing “2 columns away” could mean the distance in terms of column indices. For example, column 1 and column 4 are three columns apart? Let’s interpret: In a grid, if you say “2 columns away” it often means they are separated by exactly two columns (i.e., a difference of 2 in index). For instance, column 1 and column 3 are two columns apart (difference of 2). That matches option 2: A (pos1) and C (pos3) have a difference of 2. In option 1, A is at position 2, C at position 3 – difference of 1, not 2. So option 2 works, option 1 fails. Therefore the order is A – B – C – D – E.
Step 6: Fill the remaining causes and creatures
Now we have positions: 1: Ship A 2: Ship B (US, Cargo, Sea Monster, depth 872) 3: Ship C 4: Ship D (Submarine, China, depth 2205) 5: Ship E (France, Torpedo, depth 980)
Clue 10: Crabs are found around Warship’s neighbor. The solved grid shows Warship is Ship E (Type Warship). Its neighbor is Ship D (since E is at position 5, neighbor is position 4). So Ship D has Crabs. That matches the grid: Ship D Creatures Nearby = Crab. Also, the same clue links Ship B.Type = Cargo, already known.
Clue 11: Manta Rays are around at about twice the depth of another. The linked cells include Ship A.Type = Pirate, Ship A.Creatures Nearby = Manta Ray, Ship A.Depth = 343, and Ship B.Cause = Sea Monster. So Manta Rays are at Ship A. And the depth of Ship A (343) is about twice the depth of something? Not needed further.
Clue 12: Sharks are nowhere near the ship on Fire. Ship B’s creatures are Shark (from grid). Ship on Fire is Ship D (Cause = Fire Onboard). Are they near? Positions: B at 2, D at 4 – they are not adjacent (C is between them). So that works.
Clue 4: Whale is around Ship C that sank around the Iceberg. Ship C has Whale, and its cause is Iceberg. Good.
Clue 13: Scandinavian Cruise ship is next to the Crabs. Scandinavian means Norway (Ship C origin). Cruise is Ship C type. Crabs are at Ship D. Ship C and Ship D are adjacent – yes.
Now we have all traits except Ship A’s origin. The solved grid shows Ship A origin is Portugal. Clue 11 already gave Ship A type Pirate and creatures Manta Ray. No direct clue for Portugal, but it’s the only origin left (US, Norway, China, France are taken). So by elimination, Ship A’s origin is Portugal.
Step 7: Confirm depths
We already have depths from clues: Ship B at 872, Ship E at 980, Ship D at 2205, Ship A at 343, Ship C at 166. The deepest is Ship D at 2205, which matches clue 9.
Everything fits. The solved grid is complete.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
With the order and clue chains worked out, the only remaining cell was Ship A’s origin, which defaults to Portugal. The grid above is the final answer.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 345
“Ships next to the one at 872m are at shallower depths”
This clue (Clue 7) is easy to misread. It doesn’t say the 872m ship is at the shallowest depth; it only says its immediate neighbors are shallower. That allowed Ship D and Ship E (both deeper) to be placed away from Ship B. If you thought the 872m ship must be at one end, you’d miss the possibility of it being in the middle with shallower ships on both sides. The correct reading: any neighbor of Ship B has a depth < 872.
“France’s vessel is not neighboring the American one”
This clue (Clue 2) narrowed the possible positions for Ship E. Combined with “Ship E next to Submarine” (Clue 3), it forced Ship E and Ship D to be on the opposite side of the lineup from Ship B. Many players might try placing Ship E next to Ship B and then have to backtrack.
“Asian watercraft is next to the ship with a mammal nearby”
Clue 5 ties together Ship D (China) and Ship C (Whale). This is the key to linking the C-D-E block. Without it, the order of the deeper ships could be reversed. It also confirms that Ship C is adjacent to Ship D, not to Ship B.
“Cargo ship’s crew encountered Kraken and met their doom”
This clue (Clue 9) is dense – it assigns three linked cells at once: Ship B is Cargo, its cause is Sea Monster, and Ship D’s depth is 2205. Players might think the Cargo ship itself sank at 2205, but the clue’s linked cells specifically give Ship D’s depth separately. Reading the linked cells correctly is crucial.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 345 uses a straightforward line of five ships, but the neighbor and depth comparisons create a satisfying logic puzzle. The key was using the shallower‑neighbor rule to separate the US ship from the deeper pair, then letting the Storm‑Iceberg distance confirm the exact order. Once the positions were set, the remaining traits fell into place by elimination. Happy puzzling!
Solving more Profile Perfect levels? Bookmark the complete level answer list for quick access next time. If you have any thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments. 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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