(A) The fitness landscape represents a relationship between genotype and evolutionary fitness. It allows the mutation to settle and thrive in the sequence space. Here, peaks and valleys represent high fitness due to the accumulation of specific mutations and low fitness due to minor fitness losses, respectively. A typical wild-type virus (represented as blue) that tries to occupy sequence space of the nearest peak by consecutive mutations will gain fitness and survive. At the same time, if it tries to occupy the sequence space of the valley, it will lead to the extinction of the mutant type (red). While in certain scenarios, mutations could lead to comparatively decreased fitness (green), so the virus is not extinct but incapable of proliferation. (B) In the above figure, mutants with low mutation rates are more stable (green) and cluster at the neighboring peaks, but the fittest will out compete the others. Mutants with high mutation rates will try to occupy neighboring peaks but, due to large mutational shifts, get trapped in the sequence space and will not spread out (yellow). (C) In order to achieve the highest peak, wild jumps are needed, which consequently leads to fitness and, therefore, the probability is low for their survival. On the other hand, mutants with slow and stable leaps are mutationally robust (green ones on comparatively flatter peaks) and will prevail. Therefore, the mutants on the higher peak (yellow) will always represent lower mean fitness in comparison to mutants on flatter peaks (green).