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Eat and be eaten: How to survive and thrive in Agar.io

An unlikely internet sensation when it launched in 2015, Agar.io spawned an entire genre of spinoff “-io” games with trademark low-res graphics and free, free-for-all gameplay. Nowadays, its popularity has mostly been overtaken by Slither.io, but Agar.io still has a core fanbase that has stuck around over the past half-decade and more. Whether you want to jump back into the game for nostalgia’s sake or try it for the first time, be warned: You’re going up against cell-devouring veterans who will chew you up and spit you out, literally and figuratively.

We’ve collected all of the techniques you’ll need to get your start in Agar.io and master it.

Further reading

Getting started

The home page for Agar.io, showing various game modes, special items, purchasable credits and the Play button.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

You can play Agar.io for free in your browser or download the app for iOS or Android if you prefer touchscreens to a mouse and keyboard.

While you can choose to play as a guest online, the game incentivizes signing in via Facebook or Google by unlocking saved progress, a larger starting mass, daily quests, free coins per hour for the shop, gifts, leaderboards, and special skins.

That said, if you want to just dive right in for a few rounds and don’t care about saving your statistics, you don’t need any of these. You can hop on without any perks and still reach the top of the leaderboard. You’re just starting at a disadvantage and don’t get any credit in-game for playing well.

Before you hit Play, enter your name (or any name), and it will appear in the middle of your cell when the game starts. You can also enter certain names that will give your cell a unique skin, or appearance. For example, entering your name as “Earth” will make your cell look like the planet, “France” will add French flag colorings, and certain politician names will plaster their face into your cell. You can find an updated list of all the free available skins at this site.

If you win as a default skin name, your leaderboard climbs won’t stand out from all the other players with set names. To use your own username without getting stuck with a boring monochrome cell, you’ll have to log in to an account so you can draw your own skin pattern — or, earn coins to buy premium patterns in the Store.

Choose your mode

Image used with permission by copyright holder

There are five game modes to pick from: Free-for-all (FFA), Battle Royale, Teams, Experimental, and Party Mode. The latter mode allows you to avoid strangers altogether and make a private server for you and your friends.

FFA is endless, so you never win per se. You can rise to the top of the in-game leaderboard, but eventually, you’ll be overtaken, eaten, and have to start over. It’s a good choice to start with while you master controls. Unfortunately, it’s not always truly free-for-all, as players from particular countries or clans will team up with one another, feeding each other so that you can never catch up naturally on your own.

Battle Royale has the same contracting safe zone as most battle royale games and also starts when a set number of players are in the lobby. Unlike in FFA, where you’ll always start as the smallest cell, everyone starts on an even playing field, and the shrinking safe zone keeps games down to just five minutes or so apiece.

Teams avoid the problem of unofficially aligned players by putting everyone on opposite sides. You’ll partner up with strangers, and the most skilled group will overwhelm their opponents. Experimental, meanwhile, is where the game designers put in silly rule changes that switch up the gameplay from the core modes. It’s a fun change of pace but usually will have fewer players in a given server.

Controlling your cell

alternate skin
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Once you’ve entered the game, the controls for Agar.io are simple:

  • Move the mouse to move your blob. Your cell will automatically move toward your mouse cursor.
  • Press the Space Bar to split your cell or cells in two. 
  • Press W to eject mass.

In the beginning, you are a tiny cell sitting in a vast expanse. As you move your mouse around or tap on your screen, your cell will automatically move toward your mouse cursor or taps. The game area is dotted with tiny, colored pellets. When your cell runs into pellets, it will consume them and grow larger. Eating pellets will also increase your score.

Agar.io is also a multiplayer game, meaning you’ll quickly run across other players as you move around. Run into smaller character cells, and you’ll subsume them into your mass, but let a larger cell gobble you, and you have to restart the game. If a cell looks like it’s just smaller than you, avoid it, as a cell must be 90% of your size or less in order to be consumable.

As you consume more and grow larger, you’ll climb up the leaderboard, but you’ll move more slowly, making it harder to catch vulnerable, smaller players. You can try to trap them against the edge of the map or between another large cell, but for the best results, you’ll need to use more advanced techniques.

Strategic splitting and ejecting

By splitting, the Earth cell shoots out a clone of itself to catch the smaller orange cell.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Spend too long as a large bubble, and other players could expand into even larger behemoths while you’re puttering around, too slow to catch anyone. That’s why Agar.io players split themselves in two by pressing the Space button. While it makes you more vulnerable to large opponents, it also makes it easier to catch smaller prey or to simply collect stray pellets at a faster pace. Once you’re split, your bubbles will move in unison and will recombine into one unit after a minute or so.

An alternative option is to hit W to eject a smaller pellet of mass. Unlike the space bar, which automatically breaks you in half, the pellet won’t steal too much of your mass but can still be useful. A smaller you can more easily catch up to your prey, lingering tantalizingly just out of reach. Just make sure that you don’t feed pellets directly to other players, who will automatically eat them and grow in size, while you’ve just lost some mass.

The eject option is also great as a last-minute escape attempt. If you know you’re close to being eaten, you can expel some mass to gain some quick speed, luring your hunter away to eat the free pellets while you live to feast on pellets another day. It’s also the only way to communicate. Shooting a pellet can be a way of saying hello, thanks, or even “let’s collaborate.”

Avoid viruses and microtransactions

virus
Viruses have a distinct spiky form and present a hazard to large cells. Image used with permission by copyright holder

Viruses appear in the form of large spike-endowed green blobs floating without motion throughout the play space. You can eat them, but you probably shouldn’t. You may determine that eating them will increase your size significantly, but the virus works to partitions cells into small ones. Small cells are more likely to become vulnerable to enemies, plus keeping track of a lot of small cells is much harders than one huge one. Viruses do pose a threat to large cells, however they appear to be a safe haven for smaller ones. If you are being chased by a large cell, hide behind the virus until the threat passes. Large cells do not want to risk splitting, especially if there are other players nearby to eat them.

Don’t purchase custom boots and skins since you only get 7,000 coins for $10, which buys one skin. Instead, earn coins by playing the game. Buy the skins you like and treat them like a reward for beating your enemies.

Take on the world

danger zone
Other players come in only two forms, either threats or food. Image used with permission by copyright holder

Discounting the unique modes and pay-to-win additions, the overall gameplay has stayed the same. The changes aren’t necessary. Playing Agari.io breaks into essential competition elements. It’s fun to eat another player. Death is quick, but coming back is easy. You’ll enjoy the game and work on getting quick reflexes.

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Will Nicol
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Nicol is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends. He covers a variety of subjects, particularly emerging technologies, movies…
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