Profile Perfect Level 68 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on May 29, 2026

Before we get into the full walkthrough, here is the final answer for Level 68. Save it if needed, then continue below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 68 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 68 Answer

Here’s the completed grid for Level 68, with all the slash‑separated values included. The step‑by‑step walkthrough follows right after.

SubjectShapeDepartmentLocationYear BuiltEmployeeFloor Count
Building ARectangularFinance / ExecutiveSouth1996Rachel3
Building BDomeITWest2002Daxter5
Building CPyramidLegalNorthwest2007Adam / Ivan4
Building DTallMarketing / Customer ServiceNorth2007Pauline / Eric10
Building EHexagonalResearchEast1999Ethan3

Profile Perfect Level 68 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 68 uses five buildings as subjects, each with six traits. Several cells hold two values separated by a slash – for example, Building A’s department is both Finance and Executive. The puzzle also mixes cardinal direction locations with a hidden linear order (the list order A–B–C–D–E) for clues about adjacency. Let’s walk through how everything locks into place.

Step 1: Lock the three starting answers and Building D’s shape

screenshot

The puzzle gives us three initial answers: Building A’s location is South, Building D’s location is North, and Building C has 4 floors. Right away, clue 1 says the white Tall building is in the North, so Building D’s shape is Tall. That’s our first shape locked, and we know Building D sits in the North.

Step 2: Place Building A’s year, shape, department, and employee

screenshot

Clue 2 tells us Buildings A and E were built before 2000. From the hidden values in the puzzle, that pins Building A’s year to 1996 and Building E’s year to 1999. Clue 10 says the Finance team works in a Rectangular building, and clue 19 adds that Rachel loves her Rectangular office. So Building A is Rectangular, houses the Finance department, and Rachel is its employee. The final grid also shows Executive in the same cell – that slash‑separated value is part of the solution.

Step 3: Place Building B’s department, location, and employee

screenshot

Clue 3 puts the IT department in Building B. Then clue 9 says Buildings B and E are located opposite each other – that gives Building B’s location as West and Building E’s location as East. Clue 21 adds that Daxter does not work in the East building, so Daxter must be the IT member in Building B (West). Clue 23 confirms Ethan’s best friend Daxter is the new IT member, so Building B’s employee is Daxter.

Step 4: Determine Building C’s shape, location, department, and employees

screenshot

Clue 11 states the Legal team is placed in the Northwest building. Since we already have Building A (South), Building B (West), and Building D (North), the only spot left for Northwest is Building C. So Building C’s location is Northwest, and its department is Legal. Clue 13 says Legal is led by Adam, so Adam works there. Clue 22 says Ivan is either IT or Legal – IT is taken, so Ivan must be in Legal too. That gives Building C two employees: Adam and Ivan (a slash‑separated cell). Clue 12 says buildings built in 2007 do not have a round shape, and clue 4 already told us Building C was built in 2007 (its 4‑story building). So its shape cannot be round – and the solved grid shows it’s Pyramid.

Step 5: Confirm Building E’s shape and department using the “two buildings between” clue

Clue 6 says there are 2 buildings between the IT department (Building B) and the Hexagonal building. In the list order A–B–C–D–E, Buildings C and D sit between B and E. That means Building E must be the Hexagonal building. Clue 7 reinforces this: the Hexagonal building does Research, so Building E’s department is Research. Clue 18 then confirms Ethan works in Research, so Building E’s employee is Ethan.

Step 6: Use adjacency clues to confirm Building D’s department and the list order

Clue 5 says IT (Building B) is next to the oldest building. The oldest is Building A (1996). In the list order, A and B are directly adjacent (positions 1 and 2), so that checks out. Clue 8 says either Finance or Marketing is next to Research (Building E). Finance is in Building A (position 1), Marketing hasn’t been placed yet. Building D is at position 4, right next to Building E at position 5. Therefore, Building D must have the Marketing department. The solved grid also includes Customer Service in that same cell – another slash‑separated value.

Step 7: Lock Building D’s floor count and Building B’s floor count, plus Building D’s employees

Clue 20 says Eric’s office has twice the floors of Daxter’s. Daxter is in Building B, so Building B gets 5 floors, and Building D gets 10 floors. Clue 14 adds that Pauline’s department is in one of the newest buildings – Building D was built in 2007, so Pauline works there. The solved grid also lists Eric as another employee of Building D, so the cell holds Pauline / Eric – both valid. Clue 15 then says Pauline works next to Adam’s building (Building C), which is true since D and C are neighbors in the list order.

Step 8: Confirm the remaining positions and floor counts

Clue 16 says no one in Rachel’s building (Building A) works as Customer Service – Building D has Customer Service, so no conflict. Clue 17 says Ivan does not work in a building neighboring Rachel – Ivan is in Building C, which is not adjacent to Building A (Building B sits between them). That fits. The only floor counts left are for Building A and Building E. The values available are two 3s, so both get 3 floors. The solved grid shows that.

Step 9: Finalize the slash‑separated cells

All the multi‑value cells are now in place: Building A’s department (Finance / Executive), Building C’s employees (Adam / Ivan), Building D’s department (Marketing / Customer Service), and Building D’s employees (Pauline / Eric). Every clue has been satisfied, and the grid is complete.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 68

The “Two Buildings Between” Clue (Clue 6)

This one trips players up because it relies on the hidden list order of the subjects. The clue says “2 buildings are between IT and Hexagonal building.” If you’re only looking at cardinal locations (North, South, etc.), you won’t see a clear gap. But the puzzle actually uses the order in which the buildings are listed (A, B, C, D, E). IT is in Building B, so the Hexagonal building must be Building E – the only one that leaves two buildings (C and D) in between. Once you realize the puzzle treats the list as a line, the clue becomes straightforward.

The “Opposite” Clue (Clue 9)

“Buildings B and E are located opposite each other” might sound like they’re across a street or at opposite ends of a map. In this puzzle, “opposite” means opposite cardinal directions: West and East. Clue 9 directly gives us Building B’s location as West and Building E’s location as East. It also reveals Building B’s year as 2002. Many solvers try to infer a linear opposite instead of a directional one, but the clue is actually very literal.

The Twice‑the‑Floors Clue (Clue 20)

“Eric’s office has twice the floors of Daxter’s” links two employees to two buildings. Eric ends up in Building D (10 floors) and Daxter in Building B (5 floors). The tricky part is that Eric is hidden – he’s not initially given. You have to first know Daxter is in Building B from earlier clues, then apply the ratio. Also, because Building D already has Pauline, some players think Eric might replace her, but the slash‑separated cell shows both are valid. The clue is simply stating the floor relationship, and the employee assignment follows from other clues.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 68 ties together a mix of direct placements, hidden values, and a linear ordering that isn’t obvious at first. The key is to treat the list of buildings (A through E) as a sequence for adjacency clues, while using the location trait for the cardinal directions. Slash‑separated cells tell you that multiple answers are correct for that trait – don’t try to pick just one unless a clue specifically singles it out. Once you spot the list‑order logic, the rest of the solve flows naturally. Happy puzzling!

Solving more Profile Perfect levels? Bookmark our all-level answer guide for quick access next time. If you have any thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments. 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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