5 Must-Know Tips for Mewgenics — Breeding, Combat & Strategy
Essential Mewgenics tips every player should know: stray cat recruiting, breeding strategy, blank collar previews, neutral skill priorities, and a combat facing trick.
Whether you’re diving into Mewgenics for the first time or already deep into Act 2, these five tips will sharpen your strategy and help you avoid common pitfalls. From breeding fundamentals to a hidden combat mechanic, each tip is immediately actionable.
Tip 1: Keep Recruiting Stray Cats
Stray cats are one of the most important resources in Mewgenics — do not ignore them.
Why Strays Matter
- Fresh DNA: Breeding the same cats repeatedly leads to inbreeding, which causes negative mutations and defects
- Appeal drives quality: The higher your house’s Appeal stat, the better stray cats you’ll attract
- Genetic diversity: Introducing strays resets the inbreeding counter, giving your offspring clean slates
Tip: You don’t need to breed every stray with your best cats. Just make sure you’re regularly introducing new bloodlines to keep your gene pool healthy.
The Inbreeding Problem
Without strays, your cats will eventually all be related. That means:
- Increased chance of birth defects
- Negative mutations stacking on otherwise strong offspring
- Your best breeding pairs producing weaker and weaker kittens
Even if a super-inbred cat gets lucky and avoids defects, it’s only a matter of time before the bloodline collapses. Keep recruiting strays to stay ahead of this.
Tip 2: Unadventured Cats Can Be Better Breeders
Most players assume that their strongest, most leveled-up cats make the best breeding stock. That’s not always true.
The Ability Dilution Problem
When a cat goes on adventures, it gains multiple abilities through leveling. That means when breeding, the offspring might inherit any of those abilities — including ones you don’t want.
Example scenario:
- A Druid parent has: War Cry, Form of the Squirrel, Form of the Turtle, Form of the Wolf, plus several passives
- You want to pass down War Cry specifically
- The chance of getting War Cry is diluted across all those other abilities
The Solution: Breed Purpose-Built Cats
A cat that has only one ability (like War Cry) will pass that ability down far more reliably. Consider:
- Keeping some cats off adventures specifically for breeding
- Single-ability cats are ideal for farming specific skills onto offspring
- Adventured cats are still great for generalist breeding when you want a mix of strong traits
Tip: Match your breeding strategy to your goal. Want a specific ability? Use a single-ability breeder. Want a generally strong cat? Use your veteran adventurers.
Tip 3: Check Blank Collar Previews Before Adventures
Once you unlock Blank Collars, they become randomized copies of collars you already own — and they change daily.
How to Check
Look at the side panel of your adventure box before starting a run. It shows which classes your blank collars will be for that day.
Why This Matters
- Duplicate class strategies: Want to run two Tanks that bounce enemies back and forth? Wait for a day when Tank appears as a blank collar
- Team composition planning: Build your entire adventure roster around what blank collars are available
- Avoid wasted runs: If you need a specific class combo, just wait a day instead of forcing a suboptimal team
Tip: If you see a rare or powerful class appear in your blank collar preview, prioritize running an adventure that day — you might not see that combination again for a while.
Tip 4: Prioritize Neutral Skills Over Perfect Stats
It’s tempting to obsess over finding cats with perfect stat distributions. Don’t. The real power in Mewgenics comes from neutral skills — abilities any class can use regardless of collar.
Why Neutral Skills Are So Powerful
Neutral skills cost zero or very low mana, work on any class, and can create game-breaking synergies:
| Skill | Effect | Why It’s Strong |
|---|---|---|
| Ponder | Grants Intelligence | Free stat boost every use |
| Play Dead | Avoid injury automatically | Zero mana, prevents KO consequences |
| Nerf | Inflict Damage Down on enemy | Huge against bosses |
| Mana Share | Give 2 mana to adjacent ally per turn | Zero cost, enables expensive combos |
| Brainstorm | Reduce cost of all other spells by 1 | Ramps incredibly fast with INT builds |
| Boost | Movement ability | Free repositioning in combat |
Stats vs. Skills: The Trade-Off
The difference between 5 Strength and 7 Strength is far less impactful than having a perfectly synergistic neutral ability. Consider:
- Class collars already bridge stat gaps (a Collar boosts relevant stats)
- A cat with suboptimal stats + Play Dead will outperform a perfect-stats cat without it in many situations
- Neutral skills are inherited through breeding, so they compound over generations
Tip: When evaluating cats for breeding or adventure, check their neutral skill list before their stat sheet. A cat with 2 Luck but Brainstorm is worth far more than a cat with perfect stats and no useful neutrals.
Tip 5: Click to Change Your Cat’s Facing Direction in Combat
This is a hidden mechanic that many players — even experienced ones — completely miss.
How It Works
During your turn, click on any adjacent square on the battlefield. Your cat will turn to face that direction. That’s it. No action cost, no mana, no turn penalty.
Why Facing Matters
- Back attacks deal bonus damage — enemies hitting you from behind is devastating
- The Tank class has abilities that block attacks from the front — if enemies can only approach from the front, your Tank becomes nearly invincible
- Repositioning your cat’s facing after killing an enemy prevents the next enemy from getting a free back attack
Best Practices
- End every turn by clicking the direction you expect the next threat to come from
- After killing an enemy, immediately face the next closest threat
- Protect your squishies by facing them toward incoming enemies — even non-Tanks benefit from avoiding back attacks
Tip: Build this into a habit — at the end of every cat’s turn, click to set their facing direction. It takes zero resources and can save your run.
Summary: Quick Reference
| # | Tip | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Recruit Stray Cats | Prevent inbreeding by introducing fresh DNA regularly |
| 2 | Breed Unadventured Cats | Single-ability cats pass specific skills more reliably |
| 3 | Check Blank Collar Previews | Plan team comps around daily blank collar randomization |
| 4 | Prioritize Neutral Skills | Zero-cost abilities outweigh marginal stat advantages |
| 5 | Change Facing Direction | Click to face threats — prevents devastating back attacks |
Source: YouTube Channel Purplatypus — 5 MUST KNOW Tips for Mewgenics