Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -episodes 10-20- -
In the early 2010s, Rovio Entertainment accomplished what few mobile game developers ever manage: they turned a simple physics-based puzzle game into a global cultural phenomenon. While the games broke download records, it was Angry Birds Toons —the non-verbal, slapstick animated series launched in 2013—that truly fleshed out the personalities of Piggy Island.
By episode 10, "Off Duty," Red has been portrayed as the team’s irritable but steadfast guardian. Here, we see the toll his dedication takes. After Red exhausts himself guarding the eggs through rain, snow, and shine, Matilda forces him to take a vacation. She leaves Chuck, the Blues, and Bomb in charge. The new guards are more interested in relaxing than watching the nest, and the pigs take full advantage. They launch a surprise aerial attack, easily overpowering the distracted birds and stealing the eggs. Meanwhile, a paranoid Red cannot stop hallucinating eggs everywhere he looks. When he returns and finds his teammates injured and the eggs missing, he single-handedly charges King Pig’s fortress, demolishes it, and returns the eggs in mere seconds. After a stern scolding, Red forgives the injured birds and takes everyone—including the eggs—on a beach holiday. This episode is also notable as the first appearance of Bomb and the introduction of modern electronic devices like MP3 players and cameras in the series.
This is the most unexpectedly touching episode in the Angry Birds Toons 10-20 arc. Bomb doesn’t learn to stop exploding—he learns to aim his explosions. The climax, where he willingly blows up a pig cannon to save Matilda, turns his "curse" into a superpower.
The pigs take center stage in "Dopeys on a Rope." Corporal Pig and his minions attempt the ultimate heist: bungee jumping from a cliff to snatch the eggs. Their plan immediately goes wrong as ropes tangle and pigs crash into each other, resulting in a cascade of slapstick errors. This episode also features a heavily updated design for Corporal Pig, making him look more expressive and slightly more competent—but not by much.
Concept: Allergy attack as weapon. Matilda catches a flower allergy. Her explosive sneezes accidentally foil a pig raid. Running gag: Each sneeze launches the pigs farther than any slingshot. Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -Episodes 10-20-
On one side, you have the Pig Kingdom. It is a highly bureaucratic, technologically advanced society plagued by a complete lack of common sense. The Pigs have factories, blueprints, and monarchy, yet they are constantly undone by their own clumsiness.
Original Release: 8 June 2013
Technically, episodes 10–20 showcase some of the best work of the studio. The animation style—rendered to look like a high-end claymation or a textured 3D cartoon—hits its peak fluidity here.
Concept: Speedster competition. Chuck races a pig-built mechanical bird to prove who’s faster. Twist: The robot explodes—but a slow-moving pig wins by accidentally crossing the finish line last. In the early 2010s, Rovio Entertainment accomplished what
Professor Pig introduces a new, over-engineered vehicle designed to bypass the birds' defenses. The episode follows a series of trial-and-error tests featuring a dedicated minion pig as the crash test dummy. This episode serves as a direct homage to the spin-off game Bad Piggies , focusing entirely on unstable vehicular contraptions. Episode 18: "Slappy-Go-Lucky"
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Chuck gets the spotlight in this breakneck short. When a lone pig steals one of The Blues' toy eggs (mistaking it for a real one), Chuck decides to retrieve it using his super-speed. The result is a Looney Tunes-style chase across the entire island—through a pig construction site, across a collapsing bridge, and inside a spinning washing machine.
The silent but massive Terence takes center stage. Matilda is tending her garden when Terence sits down right beside it, blocking out the sun and causing her plants to wilt. She tries everything—from gentle nudges to extreme force—to move the immovable bird, all to no avail. The episode serves as a visual gag-filled lesson in accepting things you cannot change. It is also the first episode animated by Toon City, which introduced a noticeable and lasting change in the series’ art style. Here, we see the toll his dedication takes
Perhaps the most defining trait of episodes 10–20 is the atmosphere. These episodes solidify the setting of Piggy Island as a living, breathing place.
The animators use slow-motion to highlight Chuck’s speed, a trick rarely deployed in earlier episodes. We see him tie a pig’s shoelaces together, swap a cannonball with a feather, and even cook breakfast mid-sprint.
Bomb, the black bird, accidentally detonates during a nap, destroying half the nest. Humiliated, he goes on a spiritual journey to the top of the mountain to learn how to control his explosive temper. What he finds is a bizarre meditation guru (a wise old pelican).
represent pure, chaotic mischievousness.
This specific block of the first season highlights the escalating warfare between the birds safeguarding their eggs and the pigs executing increasingly absurd heist plans. Episode 10: "Off Duty"
No spoken words; characters use grunts, gasps, and laughs.