Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -episodes 10-20- [2021] -
In a direct parody of the classic Trojan Horse myth, the Bad Piggies build a giant, hollow robotic egg. The plan is simple: get the Birds to bring the "egg" into their nest, allowing the hidden pigs to sneak out under the cover of darkness. The plan backfires beautifully when the Birds' maternal instincts turn aggressively smothering. Episode 16: "Double Take"
Red's attempts at "proper" training backfire; features new intro theme. Thunder Chuck
This episode serves as a hilarious homage to military training and physics. Red attempts to teach the reckless Blues (Jay, Jake, and Jim) the proper, disciplined art of using the iconic slingshot. Predictably, the chaotic triplets prefer chaotic experimentation over Red's strict textbook rules, leading to immense property damage. Episode 12: "Thunder Chuck"
Confusion reigns in "Double Take." Matilda leaves the Blues in charge of the eggs, but they accidentally knock the eggs into a bush while playing in the mud. To avoid punishment, the three blue birds disguise themselves as the missing eggs. When Corporal Pig arrives, he kidnaps the disguised Blues and replaces them with pigs also pretending to be eggs. The result is a hilarious identity crisis for everyone involved. Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -Episodes 10-20-
A tiny egg hatches on a distant part of the island, far from the main flock. The hatchling—a puffball of a bird—imprints on the first thing it sees: a grumpy, retired pig soldier named Corporal Pig. The episode follows this odd couple as the Corporal tries to teach the bird to be a pig, and the bird tries to teach the Corporal to fly.
The pigs decide that if they cannot steal the real eggs, they will swap them out. They create highly detailed fake eggs to trick the birds. The plot thickens when both the pigs and the birds lose track of which eggs are real and which are fake, resulting in a frantic, confusing shell game of comedic proportions. Episode 17: "Crash Test Piggies"
represents the golden era of Rovio Entertainment’s hit animated series. Released weekly throughout 2013, this specific run of episodes solidified the show's format, relying entirely on visual humor, physical comedy, and deep character dynamics without a single line of spoken dialogue. By stripping away the need for language, Rovio created a universal comedy experience that resonated with millions of viewers globally. In a direct parody of the classic Trojan
High-stakes comedy of errors where both sides are disguised as eggs. Crash Test Piggies
King Pig builds a gigantic, opulent sandcastle on the beach. The problem: it blocks the birds’ access to their favorite berry bush. After diplomatic pleas fail, the birds declare war—not with the slingshot, but with a tide-timed engineering sabotage mission.
By Episode 10, the series moved past basic introductions and began subverting the classic "birds guard eggs, pigs try to steal them" dynamic. The writers used this 11-episode stretch to experiment with genre parodies, psychological comedy, and unexpected character team-ups. Episode 16: "Double Take" Red's attempts at "proper"
: Episodes like " Trojan Egg " (Ep. 15) and "Crash Test Piggies" (Ep. 17) lean heavily into physical comedy and Rube Goldberg-style failures, a hallmark of the series.
Bubbles (the Orange Bird) deals with a high-stakes sneezing fit that threatens the flock. Run Chuck Run
This particular stretch of episodes moved beyond simple egg-guarding and began showing us what happens when the birds aren't just angry, but bored, competitive, or just plain tired.
The episode plays with perspectives. For two minutes, the birds fight their own reflections, thinking they’re battling pig clones. The moment Red realizes that punching his own face does nothing is a pivotal character beat—he learns to stop reacting and start thinking.