Profile Perfect Level 57 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on May 28, 2026
You can save the final answer for Level 57 from the section below, then read the step-by-step guide afterward. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 57 Answer
The complete solution is right here, and below it you'll find the step-by-step breakdown of how every clue fits together.
| Subject | Name | Genre | Partner | Career Start |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actor A | Chuck | Comedy | Una | 1914 |
| Actor B | Androld | Action | Marie | 1976 |
| Actor C | Vance | Horror | Clara | 1938 |
Profile Perfect Level 57 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 57 gives us three actors to sort through, with four traits each: their name, their genre, their partner, and the year their career started. There aren’t any hidden values or initial answers already locked in, so we’re starting from scratch. The clues are straightforward but lean heavily on position relationships and negative connections, so we’ll need to stay organized. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Lock in Actor B’s name and partner
The first clue tells us directly that Actor B is known as Androld. That’s our first solid placement, so we can write Androld under Name for Actor B right away. Clue 5 then connects to this same subject: it says that Androld was together with Marie. Since we already know Actor B is Androld, that means Actor B’s partner is Marie. So now we have two cells for Actor B filled in — Name is Androld and Partner is Marie.
Step 2: Use the pre-1950 actor order to figure out the lineup
Clue 2 says that actors who started their careers before 1950 are not next to each other. This clue links two specific cells: Actor A’s career start is 1914, and Actor C’s career start is 1938. Both of those are before 1950, so we know Actor A and Actor C can’t be seated beside each other. In a three-subject lineup, that means the only way to keep them separated is to put Actor B between them. So the order from left to right must be Actor A, then Actor B, then Actor C — or the reverse. We don’t know which end is which yet, but we do know Actor B is in the middle.
Step 3: The 1914 and 1976 placement clue confirms the order
Clue 3 tells us that the actor active from 1914 is not to the right of the actor active from 1976. Since Actor A’s career start is 1914 and Actor B’s is 1976, we know that Actor A cannot be positioned to the right of Actor B. Given our three-subject lineup, if Actor A is not to the right of Actor B, then Actor A must be to the left of Actor B. That locks the order as Actor A on the left, Actor B in the middle, and Actor C on the right. Now we have the full left-to-right arrangement.
Step 4: Horror and Comedy genres fall into place
Clue 4 says the Horror actor started around 1938, and it links Actor C’s genre to Horror and Actor C’s career start to 1938. Since we already know Actor C’s career start is 1938 from the previous clue, this confirms that Actor C’s genre is Horror. Now Clue 6 says the Comedy actor is not beside the Horror actor. Actor C is Horror, and Actor A is on the left — not beside Actor C because Actor B sits between them. So Actor A can be Comedy without violating that rule. Clue 7 then tells us that Vance is not the Comedy actor. Since Actor A is Comedy, that means Actor A cannot be Vance. So Vance must belong to either Actor B or Actor C. Actor C is Horror, and we already have Actor B’s name as Androld, so Vance must be Actor C’s name. That gives us Actor C’s name.
Step 5: Fill in the remaining partner and name
Clue 8 says Una’s partner is not known for Horror films. Actor A’s partner is Una, and we already know Actor C is Horror. That fits — Una’s partner (Actor A) isn’t the Horror actor, so no conflict. We can now write Una as Actor A’s partner. The only partner left is Clara, which must go to Actor C. For the names, we have Chuck and Vance left after assigning Androld to Actor B. We already placed Vance with Actor C, so the only remaining name is Chuck, which goes to Actor A.
Step 6: Double-check the genre for Actor B
At this point, we’ve placed Comedy with Actor A and Horror with Actor C. The only genre left is Action, so Actor B gets Action. That also fits nicely with the clue that Androld was together with Marie — no conflicts there.
Solution: The grid is complete
With all the deductions made, every cell is filled. The final grid shows Actor A as Chuck in Comedy with Una starting in 1914, Actor B as Androld in Action with Marie starting in 1976, and Actor C as Vance in Horror with Clara starting in 1938. The order we worked out earlier — left to right as A, B, C — matches the position constraints from the pre-1950 and right-of clues perfectly.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 57
Clue 2: “Pre-1950 actors are not next to each other”
This one trips players up because it’s easy to misread as a timing rule rather than a position rule. The clue doesn’t say anything about when the actors sit in relation to each other by year — it says they’re not adjacent. With only three subjects, that immediately forces the two pre-1950 actors to be on the ends, with the post-1950 one in the middle. Missing that positional implication can leave you stuck on later clues.
Clue 3: “The actor active from 1914 is not on the right of 1976”
The wording here can be confusing because it compares years but is really about left/right positioning. Some players might try to interpret it as a chronological order rather than a seating order. Once you realize it’s telling you Actor A is left of Actor B, the whole lineup clicks into place. The key is remembering that “right” here means position in the grid, not a later date.
Clue 7: “Vance is not the Comedy actor”
This is a simple negative clue, but it’s easy to overlook its importance. With only three actors, eliminating one possibility for Vance closes the loop quickly. If you didn’t already place Comedy with Actor A from the previous steps, this clue works as a clean way to assign those two values. The tricky part is that it requires you to know which actor is Comedy before you can use it effectively — otherwise it just feels like a loose end.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 57 is a solid logic puzzle that rewards careful attention to positional relationships. The key insight is that the pre-1950 clue forces the middle position, and then the “not to the right” clue locks the exact order. After that, the genre and partner clues fall into place through straightforward elimination. If you got tripped up, it was probably on that first positional step — once you see that non-adjacent rule means Actor B is between the two older actors, the rest of the solve flows naturally.
For more levels, you may want to bookmark the complete level answer list so the next answer is easy to find. Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments. Good luck and enjoy!
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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