Mewgenics Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks

Emily Park March 26, 2026 guides
MewgenicsBeginner GuideTipsHow To

Getting Started

Mewgenics is a chaotic, physics-based roguelite from the creators of Binding of Isaac and Risk of Rain, where you command a squad of genetically modified cats through a series of increasingly bizarre and dangerous laboratory experiments. Unlike traditional top-down shooters, Mewgenics relies heavily on unpredictable physics, meaning every shot, jump, and enemy collision feels delightfully messy. When you first boot up the game, the sheer amount of systemic chaos can be overwhelming, but understanding the foundational loops will turn that chaos into a tactical advantage.

Your First Feline Squad

Before you dive into your first run, you must assemble a team of three cats. When starting out, the game provides you with a basic roster of randomly generated felines. Each cat has a distinct appearance, but more importantly, they come with a baseline genetic profile. This profile determines their initial stats: Health, Speed, Damage, and a unique Trait.

Do not stress too much about min-maxing your very first team. The beauty of Mewgenics is that your starting cats are temporary vessels for genetic experimentation. However, you should look for one cat with a defensive or utility trait (such as extra lives or a larger health pool) to act as your tank, and two cats with offensive traits to clear rooms quickly. Select your trio, name them if you wish, and prepare for your first drop into the lab.

The Hub and Prep Phase

After selecting your cats, you are brought to the Hub area. This is your home base between runs. Here, you can interact with various machines to modify your cats, store extra felines, and unlock permanent upgrades. For your first few hours, the Hub will be relatively sparse. Focus on finding the Cloning Vat and the Door to the next experiment. Do not spend too much time in the Hub initially; your primary goal in the beginner phase is to gather the currency and genetic material needed to unlock the Hub's true potential.

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Core Mechanics

Mewgenics is built on a foundation of overlapping systemic mechanics. If you try to play it like a standard twin-stick shooter, you will struggle. You must embrace the physics and the game's unique twist on permadeath.

The Swap System

You control one cat at a time, but you always have a squad of three. The most crucial mechanic in Mewgenics is the ability to swap between your active cats instantaneously. When you swap, your previous cat becomes stationary and invulnerable for a brief moment before returning to an idle state. Mastering the rhythm of swapping is the difference between a flawless clear and a total wipe. Use one cat to fire a shot, swap to another to dodge a projectile, and swap back to fire again. This "juggling" mechanic is the core of the game's skill expression.

Physics-Based Combat

Every projectile in Mewgenics has weight, momentum, and knockback. Your cats are physically affected by the environment and by enemy attacks. If an explosive enemy detonates next to you, your cat will be sent flying across the screen, potentially into hazards. Conversely, you can use this to your advantage. You can shoot rockets at the ground beneath your cat to launch them over walls or out of danger. Understanding how momentum works is vital for advanced movement.

Permadeath and Gene Inheritance

When a cat dies in Mewgenics, it is gone forever. However, Mewgenics softens the blow of roguelike permadeath through its brilliant gene-inheritance system. Before a run ends (either through death or victory), you can extract the DNA from your living or deceased cats. This extracted DNA allows you to pass down powerful mutations and traits to newly generated cats in the Hub. A dead cat's legacy lives on in the next generation. This means no run is ever a total waste of time; you are always building toward a better genetic lineage.

Bodily Fluids and Status Effects

The lab is a messy place. Cats can bleed, vomit, and pee, and these fluids interact with the environment. Blood makes the floor slippery, causing enemies and cats to slide uncontrollably. Vomit typically acts as a damage-over-time acid pool. You can even genetically modify your cats to weaponize these fluids, turning a defensive slip-and-slide into an offensive trap. Always be aware of the terrain you are fighting on.

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Early Game Tips

The first few hours in Mewgenics are about survival and data gathering. You will die frequently, but if you prioritize the right things, those deaths will fuel incredibly powerful runs later on.

  • Focus on DNA Extraction over Winning: In your first 5 to 10 runs, do not worry about beating the game. Your sole objective should be to survive long enough to encounter as many different mutations and traits as possible. Win or lose, extract the DNA from your cats to start filling out your genetic catalog in the Hub.
  • Learn the "Shoot and Scoot": Because of the physics engine, standing still is a death sentence. Get into the habit of firing a volley of shots, immediately dashing or swapping to reposition, and then firing again. Enemies telegraph their attacks, but the knockback from their hits can chain into other hazards. Keep moving.
  • Experiment with the Physics: Shoot the walls, shoot the floor, and shoot explosive barrels. Learn how blast radius affects your movement. Early on, figuring out how to "rocket jump" safely will allow you to reach secret rooms containing high-tier mutations that are otherwise inaccessible to beginner players.
  • Hoard Your Clones: Eventually, you will unlock the ability to clone cats. In the early game, cloning is expensive. Save your cloning resources for when you have a cat that has inherited two or three incredibly rare, synergistic mutations. Cloning a basic cat is a waste of precious early resources.
  • Ignore Complex Synergies Initially: You will see wild combinations online—cats that shoot homing missiles every time they sneeze, or cats that multiply into a swarm when hit. Do not try to force these complex builds early. Stick to simple, reliable upgrades: increased fire rate, larger magazine sizes, and flat damage boosts. Simple stats carry you through the early game while you learn enemy patterns.
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Common Mistakes to Avoid

Every new player falls into the same traps in Mewgenics. Recognizing these habits early will save you immense frustration and prevent you from losing valuable cats to easily avoidable deaths.

  • Treating Cats as Disposable Ammo: Because you have three cats, it is easy to adopt a "sacrifice" mindset, throwing one cat into a room to trigger traps while keeping the other two safe. While tactically sound in some situations, doing this constantly means you are artificially ending your run early. If you lose a cat, you lose a third of your firepower and a third of your genetic potential for that run. Protect your squad.
  • Ignoring the Swap Cooldown: Swapping is instantaneous, but it is not infinite. There is a brief internal cooldown on swapping, and if you try to juggle too fast, the game will "eat" your input, leaving you standing still as an enemy charges at you. Pace your swaps deliberately until the muscle memory is burned into your brain.
  • Chasing Mutations Without Reading the Drawbacks: Almost every powerful mutation in Mewgenics comes with a severe downside. A mutation might double your damage but make you take double damage from explosions. Another might give you infinite ammo but cause you to randomly vomit, slowing you down. New players often grab the shiny upgrade without reading the fine print, ruining their run. Always read the full description.
  • Fighting in Blood Pools Unnecessarily: Blood makes everything slippery. New players often fight in the middle of a massive blood pool created by slain enemies, only to slide directly into spikes or an enemy's projectile. After clearing a room, take a second to reposition your cats to dry ground before the next wave spawns.
  • Forgetting About the Third Cat: In the heat of a boss fight, players tend to hyper-focus on swapping between two cats that have great synergy, completely forgetting they have a third cat sitting idle in the corner. Your third cat is an extra health bar and a free "get out of jail free" card via an emergency swap. Do not let them rot in the background.
  • Hoarding Items for a "Perfect Build": Some players refuse to pick up early-level mutations because they want to save their cat's mutation slots for end-game items. This is a massive mistake. A weak cat with empty slots will die before they ever see the end game. Take the good upgrades offered to you to survive the present moment.
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Essential Controls & Settings

Because Mewgenics relies so heavily on precise physics and rapid swapping, your control scheme and settings can drastically impact your performance. The default settings are serviceable, but tweaking them will give you a significant advantage.

Recommended Key Bindings

If you are playing on a keyboard and mouse, do not use the default WASD layout for swapping. You need your right hand entirely dedicated to aiming and shooting, and your left hand needs easy access to movement and swapping without lifting your fingers. Rebind your Swap Cat 1, Swap Cat 2, and Swap Cat 3 keys to easily reachable keys around your movement hand. Popular choices among experienced players include binding swaps to Mouse Button 4, Mouse Button 5, and Spacebar, or utilizing the side thumb buttons on an ergonomic mouse. If you are using a controller, ensure the swap buttons (typically the shoulder buttons or bumpers) are easily clickable without adjusting your grip.

Crucial Settings to Adjust

  • Screen Shake: By default, Mewgenics has aggressive screen shake to emphasize the physics-based impacts. While stylistic, it can actually make it incredibly difficult to track fast-moving projectiles during chaotic moments. Turn screen shake down to 30-50% for a much clearer visual experience without losing the game's impactful feel.
  • Camera Smoothing: Camera smoothing adds a slight delay to the camera following your cat. In a game where you are constantly swapping between three different entities in different areas of the room, camera delay is your enemy. Turn camera smoothing completely off. You want the camera to snap instantly to whichever cat you are actively controlling.
  • Projectile Transparency: Because the screen can become filled with blood, explosions, and enemy projectiles, increasing the opacity or adding a glowing outline to friendly projectiles in the settings menu is highly recommended. This prevents you from accidentally dodging into your own rockets.
  • Aim Assist (Controller Users): If you are playing on a controller, leave aim assist on a low to medium setting. The physics engine means enemies are constantly being knocked around, making manual tracking difficult. A slight aim assist helps your shots land without feeling like the game is playing itself.

Progression System

Understanding how progression works in Mewgenics is the key to enjoying the game. It is a multi-layered system that operates on both a micro (per-run) and macro (meta) level.

Micro-Progression: The Run

During a single run, your cats level up by defeating enemies and completing room challenges. Leveling up presents you with a choice of two or three random mutations. This is where you build your run's synergy. As mentioned, these mutations have pros and cons. Managing these mutations during a run is a balancing act. If you stack too many negative drawbacks (like increased slipperiness and reduced health), your run will implode in the later stages, no matter how much damage you output. A successful run requires a cohesive theme—decide early if you want to be a high-damage glass cannon, a tanky brawler, or a trap-layer, and choose mutations that support that archetype.

Macro-Progression: The Lab

The true progression of Mewgenics happens in the Hub. When a run ends, you take the DNA you extracted and process it. This unlocks new base traits, physical features (like fluffy tails or distinct ear shapes, which are tied to hidden stat modifiers), and mutations in the game's global pool. Furthermore, as you unlock more items in the pool, the Hub machines upgrade. You will unlock the ability to splice two mutations together, remove negative drawbacks from a specific cat's DNA, and eventually, create fully custom cats from scratch.

Unlocking New Areas

Progressing through the game's chapters requires more than just reaching the exit. Each laboratory zone has a specific "Experiment" you must complete—such as defeating a boss without taking damage, clearing a room within a time limit, or finding a hidden exit using a specific mutation. Completing these experiments unlocks the door to the next zone and adds new enemy types and mutations to the global pool, ensuring the game constantly evolves the more you play.

Resources & Where to Find Help

Mewgenics is a complex game with a lot of hidden mechanics and obscure synergies that are not explicitly explained in the tutorial. When you hit a wall, the community is an invaluable resource.

Official and Community Hubs

  • The Official Discord: The Mewgenics Discord server is the most active place for community discussion. It is regularly frequented by the developers, making it the best place to report bugs, suggest features, and get clarifications on how specific physics interactions are supposed to work. There are also dedicated channels for sharing screenshots of ridiculous genetic abominations.
  • The Mewgenics Wiki: Because the mutation pool is massive and the descriptions can be intentionally vague, a community-maintained wiki is essential. Use the wiki to look up the exact mathematical values of mutations, figure out which base cat traits have hidden interactions, and map out the locations of hidden experiment objectives. Bookmarking the wiki on a second monitor or phone will save you hours of frustrating trial-and-error.
  • Reddit (r/Mewgenics): The subreddit is an excellent hub for macro-strategy discussions. If you are struggling to beat a specific boss or wondering how to structure your Hub upgrades for long-term efficiency, the Reddit community excels at theory-crafting and posting detailed guides complete with screenshots and video evidence.
  • YouTube and Twitch: Physics-based roguelites are highly entertaining to watch. Searching for Mewgenics on YouTube will yield countless videos of high-level players executing insane chain-reaction kills. Watching experienced players is one of the fastest ways to learn advanced movement techniques, such as how to consistently use enemy knockback to launch yourself across the map safely. Twitch is also a great resource, as you can interact with streamers directly and ask them why they made specific mutation choices in real-time.

Remember that Mewgenics is designed to be a game of iterative failure. Your first hundred cats are going to die in absurd, hilarious ways. Embrace the chaos, extract that DNA, and keep experimenting. The journey from controlling a basic house cat to commanding a squad of mutated, rocket-jumping, acid-vomiting super-felines is one of the most rewarding progression arcs in modern roguelites.

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