Face Forward
Hold still, keep your chin level, and show one clear face in frame.
Quick rules for cleaner scans, fairer matches, and better climbs—expanded into a complete guide for camera readiness, ELO discipline, privacy, account continuity, and lighting.
Hold still, keep your chin level, and show one clear face in frame.
Win consistently and beat stronger players for bigger rating gains.
Leaving an active match forfeits the result and costs 7 ELO in the shown rule.
The MogReady check runs in the browser and does not store continuous video.
Sign in to keep rank, history, purchases, and account-linked progress.
Light the face evenly, reduce harsh shadows, and clean the camera lens.
How to Mog starts with six rules that cover the full session: prepare the frame, understand ranked progress, avoid preventable forfeits, protect the practice-camera boundary, preserve account progress, and improve lighting.
Hold still, keep your chin level, and show one clear face in frame.
Win consistently and beat stronger players for bigger rating gains.
Leaving an active match forfeits the result and costs 7 ELO in the shown rule.
The MogReady check runs in the browser and does not store continuous video.
Sign in to keep rank, history, purchases, and account-linked progress.
Light the face evenly, reduce harsh shadows, and clean the camera lens.
People searching for How to Mog are usually asking several questions at once: what the guide covers, why preparation matters, how the six rules work together, where each boundary applies, and how to use the advice in a real session. The five sections below answer those questions for How to Mog as a whole.
How to Mog is a practical preparation guide for the full session, not six separate theories and not a promise that one camera trick will manufacture a win. It combines a readable first frame, fair ranked behavior, privacy awareness, account continuity, and basic lighting. Face Forward and Use Front Light improve the image you control. Win to Climb and Do Not Dodge explain how completed results protect meaningful ELO. Camera Stays Local describes the MogReady practice preview on this site, while Claim Your Rank explains why signed-in progress can follow you beyond one browser session. Together, the rules answer one useful question: what should be ready before you enter a match?
A strong setup removes avoidable problems before another player or a scanner sees the first frame. A centered face helps focus and landmark detection; soft front light preserves detail; a stable connection and enough free time make an accidental exit less likely. Fair completion also matters because ELO is intended to reflect results over time. Repeated dodging would waste another player’s time and distort that record. Privacy and account choices complete the picture: local preview reduces unnecessary continuous-camera exposure during practice, while authentication gives rank, history, purchases, and saved reports a stable owner. None of these steps decides how another person reacts, but they make your preparation clearer and more consistent.
Start with the physical setup. Clean the lens, place the camera close to eye level, face a window or soft lamp, remove strong backlight, and leave enough room around one complete face. Hold still briefly while focus and exposure settle, then run one MogReady practice scan and fix the largest visible blocker instead of chasing a perfect score. Next, confirm the correct account, a stable connection, and enough uninterrupted time to finish. Queue only when ready. During ranked play, stay through the result unless safety or a genuine technical problem requires leaving. Improve ELO through consistent completed matches and honest wins, not through dodging, manipulation, purchases, or a camera score.
Camera position and front lighting apply to the MogReady preview, photo capture, access checks, and the opening moments of a live session. The local-camera statement applies specifically to this site’s preparation view: the browser handles the live preview and landmark work without storing a continuous webcam stream. It should not be assumed to describe every third-party live platform. ELO gains, losses, and a stated 7-point dodge penalty belong to the active ranked system and should be checked against its current official rules. Account-linked rank, history, inventory, billing, and purchases appear in their respective profile or account areas, while public leaderboard fields remain different from private records.
Use How to Mog as a short repeatable checklist, especially when the room, device, or connection has changed. It is most valuable five minutes before queueing: verify the frame, improve the light, run one practice check, confirm the account and connection, then decide whether you can finish a match. Use the scan to identify controllable presentation problems, ELO as long-term competitive feedback, and the dodge rule as a reminder to queue intentionally. Do not use any of them as a measure of personal worth or a guarantee of attraction, reactions, matchmaking, wins, or fixed rating gains. The goal is a cleaner start and fairer participation, not artificial certainty.
The fastest way to use How to Mog is to turn the six rules into one short routine before queueing. Preparation should reduce uncertainty, not become an endless attempt to perfect every pixel.
Clean the lens, face a soft front light, and remove the brightest backlight from the frame.
Raise the camera near eye level, center one face, keep the chin level, and wait for focus.
Use MogReady locally, read the biggest blocker, make one practical correction, and scan again only if needed.
Confirm the intended signed-in account, stable connection, and enough uninterrupted time to complete a match.
Enter ranked play ready to finish, accept normal opponent variance, and use ELO as long-term feedback.
Win consistently and beat stronger players for bigger rating gains.
How to Mog can help with setup and rules, but it should never encourage dodging, harassment, matchmaking manipulation, or treating a rating as personal value.
Leaving an active match forfeits the result and costs 7 ELO in the shown rule.
These answers separate controllable preparation from uncertain outcomes and keep privacy, safety, and fair play visible.
How to Mog is a short preparation and fair-play guide for cleaner camera scans, more readable first frames, completed matches, account continuity, and better-informed ranked progression. It is not a guarantee of attractiveness, wins, reactions, rank, or ELO.
A forward, centered, steady face gives the browser the clearest frame for landmarks, focus, exposure, and framing feedback. It also makes the result easier to compare after you change lighting or camera position.
Complete fair matches, win consistently, learn from losses, and avoid preventable disconnects or dodges. MogReady can help improve controllable camera presentation, but actual ELO comes from the official ranked system and cannot be guaranteed by a scan.
The supplied How to Mog rule says leaving an active match forfeits it and costs 7 ELO. Because game rules can change, verify the current official rule before treating that number as permanent.
No. It means the MogReady live preparation preview and landmark work run locally and continuous webcam video is not stored. An intentional score workflow can still analyze one captured frame, and normal account, analytics, or cookie data has separate explanations.
Authentication connects rank, history, inventory, purchases, membership, and saved reports to a stable account. Anonymous or local browser state may not survive clearing storage, changing devices, or ending a session.
Use a soft window or lamp in front of you, preferably a little above eye level. Reduce strong backlight, clean the lens, avoid extreme mixed colors, and let the camera exposure settle before starting the scan.
Place it close to eye level with enough distance to show one complete face and some breathing room around the head. Avoid very low angles, extreme close-ups, and a position that cuts off the chin or forehead.
No. It improves controllable setup factors and explains fair-play rules, but another person’s reaction, matchmaking, opponent strength, wins, and rating changes remain uncertain. Use the guide as preparation rather than a promise.
Check the lens, front light, camera angle, face position, connection, account, and available time. Run one practice scan, fix the largest blocker, confirm you can finish a match, and then enter the queue intentionally.