Profile Perfect Level 54 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on May 28, 2026
If you only need the result for Level 54, you'll find it below. The walkthrough after that explains every step. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 54 Answer
I’ll show you the completed grid first, then walk through how each clue locks it in. If you’re stuck on this puzzle, the answer is right here — use it to check your work or follow the step‑by‑step reasoning below.
| Subject | Artist | Frame | Subject | Year Painted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Painting A | Hiro | Wood Frame | Ocean | 1880 |
| Painting B | Grunt | Wood Frame | Couple | 2012 |
| Painting C | Leon | Golden Frame | Person Portrait | 1612 |
| Painting D | Vince | Rope Frame | Night Sky | 1985 |
| Painting E | Castilla | Oval Frame | Peacock | 1793 |
Profile Perfect Level 54 Hints And Walkthrough
This level starts with two locked‑in answers: Painting A’s artist is Hiro, and Painting D’s frame is the Rope Frame. From there, a chain of connected clues — some about years, others about frames and neighbor positions — fills in every cell. The trickiest part is keeping track of which clue confirms multiple values at once. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Use the starting clues to lock Painting A’s year and Painting D’s subject
The first clue tells us that the Night Sky painting hangs inside the Rope Frame. Since Painting D already has the Rope Frame (initial answer), that means Painting D’s subject is Night Sky. Right away we have:
- Painting D’s frame = Rope Frame
- Painting D’s subject = Night Sky
The second clue says Hiro drew his painting in the 1800s. Painting A’s artist is already Hiro (initial answer), so this gives us:
- Painting A’s artist = Hiro
- Painting A’s year = 1880
Now we have two solid footholds — Painting A in the 1800s and Painting D with its subject and frame.
Step 2: Identify Painting C – the Portrait by Leon from 1612
Clue 3 simply states that Painting C was made by the famous Leon. That locks:
- Painting C’s artist = Leon
Clue 4 adds that the Portrait was drawn in 1612. Since Leon is the artist of Painting C, this means Painting C’s subject is Person Portrait and its year is 1612:
- Painting C’s subject = Person Portrait
- Painting C’s year = 1612
At this point, three paintings have partial info: A (artist and year), D (frame and subject), and C (artist, subject, year).
Step 3: Use the Portrait and Couple relationship to lock Painting B’s subject and year
Clue 6 says the Portrait was drawn 400 years before the Couple. The Portrait is from 1612, so 1612 + 400 = 2012. That makes the Couple painting’s year 2012, and its subject obviously “Couple.” So:
- Painting B’s subject = Couple
- Painting B’s year = 2012
Clue 5 adds a positional note: paintings with human figures in them are next to each other. The only human‑themed subjects so far are Person Portrait (Painting C) and Couple (Painting B). So B and C must be neighbors. In the default left‑to‑right order (A, B, C, D, E), B is second and C is third — they are already adjacent, so this clue confirms the placement without changing anything, but it’s good to note that B cannot be anywhere else.
Step 4: Connect Grunt’s painting to the Wood Frame and Painting B’s artist
Clue 7 says Grunt’s painting is preserved in a Wood Frame. The only painting that hasn’t been assigned an artist yet (besides A, C, and the still‑unknown D and E) is Painting B. So:
- Painting B’s artist = Grunt
- Painting B’s frame = Wood Frame
This clue also includes a link to Painting C’s year (1612), which we already have — no new info, but it helps confirm the connection.
Step 5: Oval Frame and Castilla’s painting – Painting E takes shape
Clue 8 tells us the Oval Frame painting was drawn just a few years before 1800. That means its year is 1793 (the only logical fit). So:
- Painting E’s frame = Oval Frame
- Painting E’s year = 1793
Clue 8 also links to Painting B’s subject (Couple), which we already know — a useful double‑check.
Clue 9 says Castilla’s painting was not painted in 1985. Castilla is hidden at first, but this clue reveals that Painting E’s artist is Castilla. It also tells us that the painting from 1985 is Painting D (since the year 1985 appears here as the one Castilla did not paint):
- Painting E’s artist = Castilla
- Painting D’s year = 1985
Now Painting E has artist, frame, and year. Only its subject remains.
Step 6: Peacock painting next to the 1985 painting confirms Painting E’s subject
Clue 10 says the Peacock painting’s neighbor is the one from 1985. Painting D is from 1985, and Painting E is its neighbor (positions 4 and 5). Therefore:
- Painting E’s subject = Peacock
- Painting D’s year = 1985 (already set)
So Painting E is now complete: artist Castilla, Oval Frame, subject Peacock, year 1793.
Step 7: Ocean painting inside Wood Frame – Painting A’s subject and frame
Clue 11 tells us the Ocean painting is inside the Wood Frame. Painting A has no frame or subject yet. So:
- Painting A’s frame = Wood Frame
- Painting A’s subject = Ocean
This clue also links to Painting B’s year (2012), which we already have — another consistency check.
Step 8: Fill the remaining cells – Painting D’s artist and Painting C’s frame
Now we have almost everything. Let’s list what’s left:
- Painting C’s frame is not yet assigned. The frames used so far: Wood (A and B), Rope (D), Oval (E). The only frame left is Golden Frame.
- Painting D’s artist is not yet assigned. The artists used: Hiro (A), Grunt (B), Leon (C), Castilla (E). The only artist left is Vince.
So:
- Painting C’s frame = Golden Frame
- Painting D’s artist = Vince
Clue 12 (Leon’s drawing depicts a beautiful Portrait) just restates what we already know — it doesn’t add new info, but it confirms Painting C’s artist and subject.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
Every cell is now filled. The final grid looks exactly like the table at the top of this article. All clues have been satisfied, and no unresolvable values remain. The initial hidden values (Painting E’s artist and Painting B’s year) turned out to be Castilla and 2012, which the clues revealed naturally.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 54
Clue 5: “Paintings with human in them are next to each other”
This positional clue trips some players because it doesn’t name specific paintings — you have to realize that only two subjects involve humans: Person Portrait (Painting C) and Couple (Painting B). Once you know that, the clue simply confirms that B and C are adjacent. It doesn’t tell you their order (B left of C or C left of B), but the default order in the grid already puts B before C, so no extra deduction is needed. Still, if you were trying to place them from scratch, you’d need to use other clues (like the 400‑year gap) to assign years and subjects first.
Clue 8: “Oval Frame painting was drawn few years before 1800”
This clue is straightforward about the frame and year, but it also links to Painting B’s subject (Couple). That link might confuse you because the clue text never mentions “Couple.” In Profile Perfect, some clues have extra linked cells that aren’t stated in the clue’s natural language — they’re part of the puzzle’s internal logic. Here, the link is there to reinforce that the Couple painting’s year is 2012 (which you already got from the Portrait clue). If you missed that connection, you might think the Oval Frame clue doesn’t help you with Painting B, but it does — it’s a confirmation rather than a new deduction.
Clue 6: “The Portrait was drawn 400 years before the Couple”
This is a math clue that relies on knowing the Portrait’s year (1612). If you haven’t yet assigned that year from Clue 4, you’re stuck. But once you have, the calculation (1612 + 400 = 2012) is simple. The tricky part is that it doesn’t say “400 years before,” so you don’t need to subtract — you add to get the Couple’s year. Also note that the Couple painting is the only one left for that subject, so it locks Painting B’s subject and year together.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 54 is a satisfying solve because the clues connect in a tight chain. Once you place the Portrait’s year, the Couple’s year falls right into place, and from there the frame and artist clues fill the rest. The positional clue about human paintings is the only one that might slow you down, but it’s easily resolved once you recognize which two subjects qualify. If you approach it methodically — starting with the initial answers, then moving to the clearest year‑based clues — the whole grid clicks together without any guesswork.
Working through more levels? Keep all Profile Perfect level answers 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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