Profile Perfect Level 75 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on May 30, 2026
You can save the final answer for Level 75 from the section below, then read the step-by-step guide afterward. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 75 Answer
Here’s the finished grid for Profile Perfect Level 75, with the full breakdown following right after.
| Subject | Teacher | Student Count |
|---|---|---|
| Classroom A | Geography | John |
| Classroom B | Geography | Marie |
| Classroom C | Mathematics | Lewis |
Profile Perfect Level 75 Hints And Walkthrough
When I started Profile Perfect Level 75, I saw three classrooms (A, B, C) and three traits: subject, teacher, and student count. The puzzle didn’t give me any initial locked answers, but it did hide two values from the start: Classroom A’s subject is Geography and Classroom B’s subject is also Geography. That means the same subject appears in two different classrooms – a nice head start once you know where to look. The clues are all about positions (left, right, neighbors) and a couple of teacher-based restrictions. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Place Marie using the “left of” student count clue
Clue 2 says: “The class on the left of Marie has the most students.” That tells me Marie is a teacher, so her classroom has to be somewhere in the row. The “most students” value is x3 – the largest student count in the puzzle. The clue links Classroom B to Marie and Classroom A’s student count to x3. So Marie teaches Classroom B, and the classroom directly to her left (which must be Classroom A) has x3 students. This already establishes a left-to-right order: A, B, C. If A is left of B and has x3, then B is in the middle.
Step 2: Confirm the student counts with the “more students” clue
Clue 3 says Marie has more students than the class on her right. Since Marie teaches Classroom B and we now know the class on her right is Classroom C, that means B’s student count must be greater than C’s. From the previous clue, A has x3; the only remaining numbers are x2 and x1. So B must be x2 and C must be x1. The clue links A’s student count (already x3) and B’s student count (x2). Now we have:
- Classroom A: student count = x3
- Classroom B: student count = x2
- Classroom C: student count = x1
Step 3: Use the neighbor clue to place John and Lewis at the ends
Clue 1 says John and Lewis have the same number of neighbors. This is a position clue. In a row of three classrooms, the middle one (B) has two neighbors (left and right), while the ends (A and C) each have only one neighbor. For John and Lewis to have the same number of neighbors, they must both be at the ends – one at A, one at C. The clue directly links Classroom A’s teacher to John and Classroom C’s teacher to Lewis. So John teaches Classroom A, and Lewis teaches Classroom C. That leaves Marie in Classroom B, which matches what we already had.
Step 4: Apply the “Math is not John’s strong suit” clue
Clue 4 tells us John does not teach Mathematics. This is a straightforward elimination. Since John is at Classroom A, his subject cannot be Math. The only other possible subjects are Geography (which appears in the hidden values for A) or maybe something else? But from the hidden values we already know Classroom A’s subject is Geography. This clue reinforces it: John teaches Geography because Math is ruled out. The clue links all three of Classroom A’s cells – subject, teacher, and student count – confirming that A is Geography, John, x3. This locks in the first full row.
Step 5: Finish with the “Marie and the other woman” clue
Clue 5 says Marie and the other woman teach different subjects. Who is the other woman? We have three teachers: John, Marie, Lewis. The only two female names here are Marie and Lewis (yes, Lewis can be a woman in this puzzle). So Marie and Lewis teach different subjects. From the hidden values, we already know Marie (Classroom B) teaches Geography. Therefore Lewis must teach a different subject – which is Mathematics. The clue links Classroom B’s teacher to Marie, Classroom C’s teacher to Lewis, and Classroom C’s student count to x1. So Classroom C is Mathematics, Lewis, x1. That fills the last row.
At this point Classroom B is the only incomplete row. Its subject must be Geography (hidden value confirmed), and its teacher and student count are already placed. So the grid is complete.
Solution: All three classrooms confirmed
After the clues, here’s what we have:
- Classroom A: Geography, John, x3
- Classroom B: Geography, Marie, x2
- Classroom C: Mathematics, Lewis, x1
Every cell is accounted for, and the hidden values matched up perfectly with the clue chain.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 75
Clue 1: “John and Lewis have the same number of neighbors”
This one can trip you up if you forget that “neighbors” means adjacent classrooms, not people. The puzzle doesn’t explicitly say the classrooms are in a row, but the left/right clues from later in the set imply a linear order. Once you assume A-B-C left to right, it’s clear that only the two ends have one neighbor each. If you mistakenly think a classroom could be isolated or arranged differently, you might try to give John and Lewis two neighbors each – which would be impossible. The key is to read “neighbors” as immediate adjacent cells in the grid order.
Clue 2: “The class on the left of Marie has the most students”
This clue links Marie to Classroom B and the student count x3 to Classroom A. But it doesn’t tell you which classroom is left of Marie unless you already know the order. The puzzle expects you to infer that the subject order (Classroom A, B, C) is the left-to-right arrangement. If you try to reorder the classrooms, you’ll get stuck. Once you accept that A is leftmost, B middle, C rightmost, the clue places Marie in the middle and gives you the high student count on the left.
Clue 5: “Marie and the other woman teach different subjects”
The confusing part is identifying “the other woman.” The only teachers are John, Marie, and Lewis. John is typically a male name, so it must be Lewis who is the second woman. If you assume Lewis is male, you might think the clue refers to some unnamed fourth teacher – but there is none. The puzzle uses the name Lewis for a female teacher, which is unusual but consistent. Once you accept that, the clue simply confirms that Marie (Geography) and Lewis (Math) have different subjects.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 75 is a neat little puzzle that relies on positioning and a couple of teacher-specific exclusions. The hidden values make the subject column mostly obvious, but you still have to use the left/right and neighbor clues to figure out which teacher goes where. The trickiest part is recognizing that Classroom A, B, C are in a fixed left-to-right line, and that Lewis is a woman. Once those assumptions click, the rest of the solve flows naturally. Happy puzzling!
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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