I remember that. I was paying attention. The Chinese set up field hospitals to deal with it. I thought later it was a psyop to scare the world about it to make the west overreact and destroy western economies, and if that was the plan it worked great. But China also suffered in locking down entire huge cities of many millions of people.
And then by the time it reached the USA it was largely a dud. Maybe it mutated shortly after being released. That's possible.
It is lab created and not naturally occurring, so the mutation factor is built in.
My expectation is that lab made or natural, it would have the same propensity to mutate. I don't expect viruses can be programmed to mutate in a desired way.
That's a general assumption among biologists but I suggest it's possible that at least with DNA, mutations and gene selections that go into subsequent generations may not be so random. Has anyone ever proven it's random? I don't think so. I suspect it's just assumed.
With viruses, it may well be random as viruses can obviously afford to just have totally random mutations occur with 99.9999% of variants failing. But complex creatures like mammals can't afford that.