Profile Perfect Level 511 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on July 10, 2026
Here is the final answer for Level 511 so you can save it first. Then, I'll explain the full step-by-step walkthrough. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 511 Answer
Before I break down the logic, here is the complete solved grid. Use this as your reference while reading the walkthrough.
| Subject | Defendant | Judge | Judge Sentence | Defendant Reaction | Audience Count | Time of Day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial A | Abraham | Johnson | Fines | Angry | x3 | Morning |
| Trial B | Nelson | Winnie | House Arrest | Sad | x2 | Evening |
| Trial C | Fernando | Johnson | Essay Writing | Neutral | x4 | Evening |
| Trial D | Amanda | Joyce | Jail Time | Shocked | x1 | Noon |
Profile Perfect Level 511 Hints And Walkthrough
This puzzle gives you one locked answer from the start: Fernando is the defendant in Trial C. From there, several clues drop direct names and values, while others rely on position order across the four trials. I will walk through each deduction in the order that made the most sense to me.
Step 1: Use the starting answer and the breakfast clue
The puzzle shows that Trial C’s defendant is Fernando. That is a fixed starting point.
Clue 12 tells us that Abraham wants to finish up so he can eat breakfast. This directly locks three cells for Trial A: defendant Abraham, time of day Morning, and judge sentence Fines. So Trial A is now partially filled.
Step 2: Place Amanda and Winnie from clear clues
Clue 5 says almost no one attends Amanda’s trial. That gives us Trial D’s defendant Amanda, audience count x1, and judge Joyce. Clue 6 says Winnie’s courtroom does not have a full audience. That gives Trial B’s judge Winnie, audience count x2, and defendant Nelson.
Now we have defendants for all four trials: A Abraham, B Nelson, C Fernando, D Amanda. Judges: B Winnie, D Joyce. Sentences: A Fines.
Step 3: Let Johnson take the most watched trials
Clue 7 says both trials led by Johnson have the most people watching. The only two judges left are Johnson for Trials A and C. So Trial A’s judge is Johnson, and Trial C’s judge is Johnson. That means the audience counts for those two trials must be the highest numbers available. From the remaining audience values (x1, x2, x3, x4), the largest are x3 and x4. We know Trial D already has x1 and Trial B has x2. So Trial A gets x3 and Trial C gets x4. This also confirms that Johnson judges both trials.
Step 4: Evening trials and the time of day
Clue 10 says several trials happen near the end of the day. This links Trials B and C to the Evening time slot. So Trial B’s time is Evening, and Trial C’s time is Evening. Trial A is already Morning from the breakfast clue, so the only remaining time, Noon, goes to Trial D.
Step 5: Work out the reactions
Clue 8 mentions a defendant without any reactions and says that defendant is not beside the angry one. The linked cells show Trial A’s reaction is Angry, Trial C’s reaction is Neutral, and Trial A’s time is Morning (already known). So we set Trial A reaction to Angry and Trial C reaction to Neutral. Because Trial B sits between Trials A and C, the neutral defendant is not next to the angry one, which matches the clue.
Clue 9 says the defendant to the right of the room with the highest audience does not expect the outcome. The room with highest audience is Trial C (x4). The defendant to its right is Trial D, and the clue links Trial D’s reaction as Shocked. So Trial D reaction is Shocked. The only reaction left is Sad, which must belong to Trial B.
Step 6: Sentences fall into place
Clue 4 says the person getting locked up (jail time) is to the right of the one with essay writing. The linked cells show Trial C’s sentence is Essay Writing, Trial D’s sentence is Jail Time, and Trial D’s judge is Joyce (already placed). So we can set Trial C sentence to Essay Writing and Trial D sentence to Jail Time. Trial A already has Fines, so the only remaining sentence is House Arrest for Trial B.
This also matches the initial clue 2, which said sentences are given to the two defendants in the middle (Trials B and C) and linked House Arrest and Essay Writing.
Step 7: Confirm all remaining values
Audience counts: Trial A x3, Trial B x2, Trial C x4, Trial D x1. Times: A Morning, B Evening, C Evening, D Noon. Defendants: A Abraham, B Nelson, C Fernando, D Amanda. Judges: A Johnson, B Winnie, C Johnson, D Joyce. Sentences: A Fines, B House Arrest, C Essay Writing, D Jail Time. Reactions: A Angry, B Sad, C Neutral, D Shocked.
Every cell is filled, and no contradictions remain.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 511
Clue 8: “Defendant without any reactions is not beside the Angry one”
This wording can be confusing. The clue refers to the defendant who shows no strong reaction, which in the puzzle is the Neutral reaction. It then says that defendant is not adjacent to the Angry defendant. Since Neutral ends up in Trial C and Angry in Trial A, the position of Trial B between them satisfies the condition. Many players might think “without any reactions” means a missing value, but here it simply means a neutral expression.
Clue 4: “The person getting locked up is right of the one with”
The clue is cut off, but the linked cells tell us exactly what it means. The person getting locked up is the defendant receiving Jail Time. That defendant (Trial D) is to the right of the defendant who gets Essay Writing (Trial C). This clue also repeats that Trial D’s judge is Joyce, which we already have from clue 5. The main takeaway is the positional relationship between the sentences.
Clue 11: “Audience counts in Evening trials are not”
Again the clue is incomplete. Based on the linked cells, it confirms that the two Evening trials (B and C) have audience counts x2 and x4. The “are not” may indicate they are not equal, but the actual function is to lock those specific numbers into those positions. Once you know which trials are Evening, this clue simply finalizes their audience counts.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 511 relies heavily on direct name drops and a few positional clues about right and left. Once you place the locked answer for Trial C, the breakfast clue, the Amanda clue, and the Winnie clue give you most of the people. From there, Johnson’s connection to the largest audiences and the Evening time slot fill in the rest. The reactions and sentences then fall into place through the remaining clues. Pay attention to how the clues link multiple cells at once, and remember that the “rightmost” or “to the right of” refers to the order of the trials from left to right. With that approach, the whole grid unlocks without much guesswork.
Working through more levels? Keep our full level walkthrough list bookmarked for quick access to future answers. Have a suggestion or thought? Leave it in the comments. 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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