Profile Perfect Level 76 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on May 30, 2026
Here is the completed answer for Level 76 before the detailed explanation begins. Continue below for the full walkthrough. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 76 Answer
I’ll show you the completed grid first, then walk through each clue step-by-step so you can see exactly how everything locks in.
| Subject | Teacher | Subject | Class |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teacher A | Jennifer | Biology | 12-B |
| Teacher B | Karen | Art | 10-C |
| Teacher C | Andrew | Phys Ed | 12-A |
Profile Perfect Level 76 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 76 puts three teachers – A, B, and C – into a grid with columns for their name, the subject they teach, and their homeroom class. There are no initial answers or hidden values to worry about, so every clue points directly to one or more cells. The trick is reading the positional hints right and not getting tripped up by the “same grade” wording.
Here’s how I worked through it.
Step 1: Use the mustache clue to name Teacher C
Clue 1 says only Teacher C has a well-groomed mustache, and that teacher is Andrew. That’s a clean, direct link: Teacher C’s name is Andrew. I wrote that into the grid right away.
Step 2: Homeroom grades separate Teacher B from the rest
Clue 2 tells us “Teachers A and C have homerooms of the same grade.” The grades here are the first part of each class code – 12-A, 12-B, 10-C. Since A and C share grade 12, they must take the two 12‑something classes. That leaves Teacher B with the remaining class: 10-C. So I filled in Teacher B’s class as 10‑C.
Step 3: Biology and PE aren’t neighbors – Teacher B gets Art
Clue 3 says the Biology and PE teachers are not neighbors. At this point we don’t know who teaches what yet, but the clue also directly confirms two things: Teacher B’s subject is Art and Teacher B’s class is 10‑C (the same class we already placed). So now Teacher B is locked in as Art, and we know the Biology and PE teachers must be A and C (since they aren’t neighbors – that is, they sit on opposite ends of the row, or at least not next to each other). But we still need to figure out which is which.
Step 4: The teacher to the Art teacher’s right teaches handstands
Clue 4: “The one to the Art teacher’s right teaches handstands.” The game’s grid lists teachers left to right as A, B, C. So the Art teacher is Teacher B (we already know that). The teacher to B’s right is Teacher C. That means Teacher C teaches Phys Ed (handstands). So I filled in C’s subject as Phys Ed.
Now the only subject left is Biology, which must belong to Teacher A.
Step 5: Jennifer’s wish reveals Teacher A’s name and class
Clue 5: “Jennifer wishes to teach class 10‑C, but she does not.” That means Jennifer is not Teacher B (who has class 10‑C). Could she be Teacher C? Possibly, but the clue also says Teacher A’s teacher is Jennifer and Teacher A’s class is 12‑B. So Jennifer is definitely Teacher A, and A’s homeroom is 12‑B. That also rules out any other name for A – it’s Jennifer.
Step 6: The liver exam confirms Teacher A’s subject
Clue 6: “Homeroom 12‑B’s exam asks about the functions of liver.” Homeroom 12‑B belongs to Teacher A, so the subject must be Biology. This ties everything together: Teacher A’s subject is Biology (which we already suspected), and the clue also repeats that Teacher A’s teacher is Jennifer and Teacher A’s class is 12‑B. Everything is consistent.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
At this point we have:
- Teacher A: Jennifer, Biology, 12‑B
- Teacher B: ???, Art, 10‑C
- Teacher C: Andrew, Phys Ed, ???
The only name left is Karen, so Teacher B’s name is Karen. The only class left is 12‑A, so Teacher C’s class is 12‑A. The grid is complete, matching the answer table you saw at the top.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 76
“Only teacher C has a well-groomed mustache”
This clue is straightforward, but some players might wonder whether “teacher C” refers to the subject label or the name. In Profile Perfect, the subject labels (Teacher A, B, C) act as the row identifiers. So “teacher C” means the third row. The clue then directly gives you the value for that row’s name cell. No hidden tricks.
“Teachers A and C have homerooms of the same grade”
The word “grade” can be confusing because the class codes contain both a grade number and a section letter (like 12-B). The clue only cares about the numeric grade (12 vs. 10). Once you realize Teachers A and C must both have grade 12, you know Teacher B has grade 10, which narrows the class to 10‑C (the only grade‑10 option). This clue works together with later ones to anchor Teacher B.
“Biology and PE teachers are not neighbors”
The “neighbor” concept assumes the teachers are arranged in order A–B–C left to right. If you haven’t internalized that order, this clue can feel vague. But once you accept the default layout, “not neighbors” means Biology and PE cannot be A and B together or B and C together – they must be A and C. That indirectly locks Teacher B into Art, which is confirmed by the clue’s own linked cells.
“Jennifer wishes to teach class 10‑C, but she does not”
This clue does two things at once: it tells you that Jennifer is not the teacher of 10‑C (Teacher B), and it also directly assigns Jennifer to Teacher A and gives A’s class as 12‑B. The “wishes” phrasing might make you think it’s only a hint, but the linked cells are absolute. Read it as: “Jennifer is Teacher A, and Teacher A’s class is 12‑B” – the wish part is just flavor.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 76 is a clean, clue‑driven puzzle where each step builds on the last. The key was recognizing that “same grade” pins Teacher B to class 10‑C, and the “not neighbors” rule combined with the right‑of‑Art clue hands you the subjects in order. No hidden values, no slash‑separated cells – just straight‑ahead logic that rewards careful reading. If you got stuck, it was probably on the positional phrasing; once you treat the teacher order A, B, C as fixed, everything falls into place. Happy solving!
Stuck again later? Return to the Profile Perfect walkthrough page for more answers and walkthroughs. If you have comments, suggestions, or feedback, leave them below. Good luck!
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.
More Profile Perfect Guides
Trending Guides

A Visual Dictionary of Profile Perfect Clue Words

How Profile Perfect Balances Direct Clues and Indirect Clues

The cutest logic puzzles in Profile Perfect



