Profile Perfect Level 99 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 1, 2026
The final answer for Level 99 is listed below for quick saving. Then, I'll break down the solution step by step. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 99 Answer
Here’s the completed grid for Profile Perfect Level 99 — the answer is up top, and I’ll walk you through how each clue locks it in below.
| Subject | Color | Feature | Inhabitant | Climate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planet A | Brown | Ring | Celo | Tropical |
| Planet B | Pink | Satellite | Ciph | Wet |
| Planet C | Pink | Crater | Doe | Tropical |
| Planet D | Blue | Crystal | Plato | Polar |
Profile Perfect Level 99 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 99 puts four planets in a row and asks you to match each one with a color, a surface feature, an inhabitant, and a climate. There are no initial answers locked in, but the clues are tightly connected through neighbor relationships. The key is figuring out the order of the planets first — once you know who sits next to whom, the rest clicks into place quickly.
Step 1: Lock Doe onto Planet C
The very first clue tells us straight up that Doe lives on Planet C. That’s a direct assignment, no deduction needed. So we write Doe under Inhabitant for Planet C. This becomes our anchor for several other clues.
Step 2: Use the “only one neighbor” clue to place Ciph
Clue 2 says that Ciph is next to a planet that has only one neighbor. In a line of four planets, only the two end planets have exactly one neighbor. So whichever planet Ciph lives on must be right next to either Planet A or Planet D. The same clue then confirms Ciph’s home — it tells us Ciph is the inhabitant of Planet B. That means Planet B is adjacent to an end planet. We don’t know which end yet, but we know B is not at the end itself (because it has a neighbor on one side and the clue implies it’s not the one-neighbor planet).
Step 3: Doe’s neighbors reveal the order
Clue 4 says that the planets next to Doe (who is on Planet C) have the features Satellite and Crystal. So Planet C must be in the middle of the row, with one neighbor to its left and one to its right. That rules out Planet C being an end planet. From the solved grid we know Satellite belongs to Planet B and Crystal belongs to Planet D. Therefore Planet C’s neighbors are Planet B (with Satellite) and Planet D (with Crystal). This gives us the order B – C – D in sequence. The only remaining planet is A, which must go on the other side of B to complete the row. So the full order is A – B – C – D.
Step 4: Confirm the end planet and Ciph’s neighbor
Now that we know A is at the left end, it has only one neighbor: Planet B. That matches the earlier clue — Ciph on Planet B is next to a planet with one neighbor (Planet A). Everything fits.
Step 5: Place the Pink planets from the color neighbor clue
Clue 6 says both the Brown planet and the Blue planet are next to a Pink planet. We know from later clues that Brown is Planet A and Blue is Planet D. So Planet A (Brown) must be next to a Pink planet. The only neighbor A has is B, so Planet B’s color is Pink. Similarly, Planet D (Blue) must be next to a Pink planet. D’s only neighbor is C, so Planet C’s color is also Pink. That gives two Pink planets — B and C — which is exactly what the clue expects.
Step 6: Use the Ring and Wet clue to identify Planet A
Clue 8 says the planet with a Ring feature is next to the Wet climate. The only planet with a Ring in the solved grid is Planet A. That ringed planet is right next to Planet B, so Planet B’s climate must be Wet. Perfect, because we already have B placed next to A.
Step 7: Lock the Brown planet’s climate and the Polar planet
Clue 7 says the Brown planet (Planet A) does not have the coldest climate. The coldest is Polar (from clue 9). So Planet A cannot be Polar. The only remaining climate options are Tropical and Wet, but we already know Wet belongs to Planet B. Therefore Planet A’s climate is Tropical.
Clue 9 says the planet with Crystals has a Polar climate. The only planet with Crystal is Planet D, so Planet D’s climate is Polar and its color is Blue (already known from other clues). That also confirms Planet D’s inhabitant as Plato because clue 5 tells us Planet D shares the same color as its inhabitant — Blue goes with Plato.
Step 8: Fill in the remaining traits
We now have Planet B’s inhabitant (Ciph), color (Pink), feature (Satellite), and climate (Wet). Planet C’s inhabitant (Doe), color (Pink), feature (Crater from clue 3), and climate (Tropical). Planet D’s color (Blue), feature (Crystal), inhabitant (Plato), and climate (Polar). That leaves Planet A with color Brown, feature Ring (from clue 8), inhabitant Celo (the only one left), and climate Tropical. All slots are filled.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 99
“Ciph is next to a planet with only one neighbor”
This clue can trip you up because it phrases the relationship from Ciph’s perspective. You have to realize that “a planet with only one neighbor” is an end planet. But you don’t know which end yet. The clue doesn’t directly tell you Ciph’s planet — it just says Ciph is next to such a planet. Then the same clue reveals Ciph is on Planet B, which only makes sense after you later deduce the order. Take it step by step: first note that Ciph’s planet is adjacent to an end, then use the neighbor clues to confirm B is that planet.
“Doe neighbors are planets with Satellite and Crystal”
Some players might think Doe’s planet (C) itself has those features. But the wording “neighbors are” clearly points to the adjacent planets. It’s a classic pattern in Profile Perfect: a clue about neighbors often gives you two features in one go. Here it simultaneously locks the order (C is between B and D) and confirms two features (Satellite on B, Crystal on D).
“Both Brown and Blue planets neighbor a Pink planet”
Since there are two Pink planets (B and C), this clue works cleanly, but it’s easy to misread and think each colored planet only has one neighbor. Actually, Brown (A) neighbors only B (Pink), and Blue (D) neighbors only C (Pink). So the clue confirms that both Pink planets are exactly the ones adjacent to A and D — which solidifies the order and the colors.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 99 is a great example of how a handful of neighbor clues can completely determine a row of four planets. The solve revolves around placing Doe on C, then using the “only one neighbor” and “neighbors have Satellite and Crystal” clues to lock the order A‑B‑C‑D. From there, the color, climate, and feature clues drop right into place. Once you see that planetary lineup, everything else is just matching leftovers. Happy puzzling!
Need help with another level later? Save the complete walkthrough hub so you can return whenever you need the answer. If you have feedback or ideas, share them in the comments. Good luck and enjoy the puzzle!
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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