Profile Perfect Level 348 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

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Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 25, 2026

Here is the completed answer for Level 348 before the detailed explanation begins. Continue below for the full walkthrough. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 348 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 348 Answer

I'll put the complete solution grid up front, then guide you through how each clue locks in the rest. Here's the final arrangement for all five oil rigs:

SubjectResource ExtractedActive TimeFrequent Disaster
Oil Rig ANatural GasNightEarthquake
Oil Rig BCrude OilDawnTsunami
Oil Rig CSulfurNoonHurricane
Oil Rig DSaltMorningSeagull Invasion
Oil Rig EKelpEveningTsunami

Profile Perfect Level 348 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 348 gives us a head start with three initial answers already locked in, so we don’t have to guess where to begin. The puzzle involves five oil rigs, and we need to figure out what resource each one extracts, what shift time it runs, and which disaster keeps plaguing it. Some clues link multiple pieces of information at once, so once you place one value, the rest often fall into place.

Step 1: Lock the noon rig using the starting clue

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The very first clue tells us the middle oil rig is the busiest at noon. In a lineup of five rigs (A through E), the middle one is Oil Rig C. That immediately locks in Oil Rig C’s active time as Noon. This is a clean, direct placement and gives us a solid anchor point to start from.

Step 2: Place Crude Oil and the Night shift from the initial answers

screenshot

Clue 2 says Oil Rig B produces a non-solid product. The only non-solid option here is Crude Oil (it’s a liquid), so Oil Rig B’s resource is Crude Oil. That’s a straightforward lock.

Clue 3 tells us the Natural Gas rig is working overtime to hit its target. We already know from the initial answers that Oil Rig A extracts Natural Gas, so this clue confirms that Oil Rig A’s active time is Night. Now we have two more pieces firmly placed.

Step 3: Use the neighbor clue to place two more shift times

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Clue 5 is a positional clue that takes a bit more thinking. It says the right neighbor of the Morning rig works half a day later. That means if Morning is at some position, the rig immediately to its right runs in the Evening (half a day later is a six-hour difference, and Morning to Evening fits that). We already have Oil Rig C at Noon, so Morning can’t be C. If Morning were Oil Rig A, its right neighbor would be B, but B would then need Evening, and we’ll see why that doesn’t work soon.

Let’s test the other positions. If Oil Rig D is Morning, then its right neighbor is Oil Rig E, which would be Evening. That fits neatly. Plus, Oil Rig C is already Noon, which is between Morning and Evening in terms of time order. This clue also reinforces that Oil Rig C’s time is Noon, so everything lines up. So we can lock Oil Rig D’s active time as Morning and Oil Rig E’s active time as Evening.

Step 4: The Morning rig clue reveals its resource and disaster

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Clue 6 states that the Morning rig is often invaded by animals stealing its Salt. We just placed Morning at Oil Rig D, so that means Oil Rig D’s resource is Salt, and its frequent disaster is Seagull Invasion. Three values locked in one clue — that’s a lot of progress.

Step 5: Link the Oil and Kelp rigs through the same misfortune

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Clue 4 tells us the Oil rig (Oil Rig B) and the Kelp rig often encounter the same misfortune. So whatever disaster hits Oil Rig B must also hit the rig that extracts Kelp. We already know Oil Rig B extracts Crude Oil, so the Kelp rig must be one of the remaining rigs (A, C, or E). And the disaster they share will be the same for both.

This clue gives us a direct link: Oil Rig B’s frequent disaster equals Oil Rig E’s frequent disaster (since we’ll identify E as Kelp soon), and both are Tsunami. For now, we note that this clue will lock in the Kamikaze disaster for both, but we need more context first.

Step 6: Use the disaster chain clue to place Earthquake, Dawn, and Sulfur

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Clue 7 says Rig B’s disaster often follows Rig A’s disaster. That means the disaster at Oil Rig B happens after the disaster at Oil Rig A. Since Oil Rig B’s disaster is Tsunami (from the previous clue), Oil Rig A’s disaster must be Earthquake. This clue also tells us Oil Rig B’s active time is Dawn, and Oil Rig C’s resource is Sulfur.

Wait, we already had Oil Rig B’s time as unknown, and now it’s Dawn. That fits because Dawn is earlier in the day than Tsunami (which could happen anytime, but the clue is about order, not time of day). And Oil Rig C’s resource is Sulfur, which we didn’t have yet.

Now we have Oil Rig B’s time as Dawn, and its disaster as Tsunami. And Oil Rig C’s resource is Sulfur.

Step 7: Fill the remaining Kelp rig and confirm the twin disaster

We have Oil Rig E’s resource still unknown. From Clue 4, the Kelp rig shares a disaster with the Oil rig (B). Since Oil Rig B’s disaster is Tsunami, and Oil Rig E is the only rig left without a resource, Oil Rig E must be the Kelp rig, and its disaster is Tsunami. That matches Clue 4 perfectly.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

At this point, we have every cell filled except Oil Rig C’s disaster and Oil Rig A’s resource (which is already Natural Gas from the initial answer). Let’s check what’s left:

  • Oil Rig A: Resource = Natural Gas (locked), Time = Night (locked), Disaster = Earthquake (locked from Step 6). Done.
  • Oil Rig B: Resource = Crude Oil (locked), Time = Dawn (locked), Disaster = Tsunami (locked). Done.
  • Oil Rig C: Resource = Sulfur (locked), Time = Noon (locked), Disaster = ? The only disaster not used yet is Hurricane. So Oil Rig C’s disaster is Hurricane.
  • Oil Rig D: Resource = Salt (locked), Time = Morning (locked), Disaster = Seagull Invasion (locked). Done.
  • Oil Rig E: Resource = Kelp (locked), Time = Evening (locked), Disaster = Tsunami (locked). Done.

Everything slots together without any leftover conflicts. The Hurricane for Oil Rig C is the final piece, and it fits because no other clue claimed it.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 348

The neighbor clue for Morning and Evening

Clue 5 can trip you up because “half a day later” isn’t obviously Morning to Evening unless you think about what half a day means in this context. Morning to Evening is about 12 hours, which is half a day, so that works. Some players might try Noon to Midnight, but Midnight isn’t an option here. The key is realizing the only pair that fits is Morning and Evening, and then testing which rigs could sit next to each other.

The disaster chain that also gives a resource and time

Clue 7 packs a lot of information into one sentence. It says Rig B’s disaster follows Rig A’s disaster, which locks Earthquake for A and Tsunami for B. But it also says Rig B’s active time is Dawn and Rig C’s resource is Sulfur. That’s three separate facts from one clue, and it’s easy to miss the extra placements if you’re only focused on the disaster relationship. Make sure to read every linked cell in the clue — the game shows all of them for a reason.

The Oil and Kelp shared disaster clue

Clue 4 might confuse players because it doesn’t explicitly name which rig is the Kelp rig. It just says the Oil rig (which you already know is B) and the Kelp rig share a misfortune. That means you have to figure out which of the remaining rigs extracts Kelp. The clue doesn’t tell you which one it is directly — you have to use elimination later when other clues fill in the rest. If you try to place Kelp too early, you might guess wrong.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 348 is a clean, satisfying puzzle once you spot how the initial answers and positional clues work together. The key moves are locking the middle rig to Noon first, then letting the neighbor clue place Morning and Evening, which cascades into identifying the Salt rig and its seagull problem. After that, the disaster links between the Oil and Kelp rigs, plus the chain clue about earthquakes and tsunamis, fill the rest. No hidden values or slash-separated cells to worry about — just straight deduction from start to finish.

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 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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