Score tips

Brush Cat Game Tips

Higher scores come from patience more than speed. These tips focus on the mistakes that usually end a brush cat run early.

Use compact strokes

Brush in shorter passes instead of huge sweeps. Compact movement keeps you ready to stop when the warning starts.

Watch mood first

Your hand wants one more point, but your eyes should be tracking the cat. The first visual warning matters more than the next stroke.

Reset your rhythm

After a successful freeze, do not rush back in. Start with a small stroke so the next pressure build is easier to read.

Do not chase the edges

The brush zone is centered on the cat's back. If you chase the edges of the image, you spend more time making movement that does not score and more time needing to correct your position.

Stay in the middle of the back area and let your score grow from repeatable strokes. A tidy run usually lasts longer than a wide run.

Treat warnings as part of scoring

The warning phase is not downtime. It is where a good run is protected. Every successful freeze keeps your score alive and gives you another chance to add points.

If you think of warning as an interruption, you will hurry. If you think of warning as the second half of the game, your runs become more consistent.

When to play hard mode

Hard mode is best after you can reliably survive several warnings on Medium. It raises pressure faster and adds rare surprise turns, so it rewards players who already have a calm stopping habit.

If Hard feels unfair, go back to Medium and practice freezing before the warning sound finishes. That habit transfers directly into better Hard scores.

Quick answers

Brush Cat Game FAQ

What is the easiest way to improve?

Stop making long strokes. Compact brushing gives you more control, especially when the cat turns suddenly.

Should I play Easy for high scores?

Easy is useful for learning, but Medium usually feels better once you understand the warning rhythm. Hard is for sharper reaction runs.