When Angry Birds Toons first aired in 2013, fans of the original mobile game were skeptical. Could a franchise built on a simple premise—flinging birds at green pig fortresses—translate into compelling short-form storytelling? The answer arrived decisively in the show’s first batch of episodes. But it was within the block of Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -Episodes 10-20- that the series truly found its rhythm. This specific collection of ten shorts represents a creative turning point, moving from basic “birds vs. pigs” setups to character-driven comedies, heartbreakingly funny failures, and surprisingly heartfelt moments.
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. Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -Episodes 10-20-
Maximum. The episode plays like a silent-era short by Buster Keaton. Red’s fishing rod bends into a pretzel. A pig inside the submarine waves a white flag. Red nonchalantly reels in the torpedo-egg, cracks it open, and makes an omelet while the submarine sinks in the background. When Angry Birds Toons first aired in 2013,
“Operation Oink Oink is a go.” Episode 14: "Piggy Island Mysteries – The Haunted Castle" A rare horror-comedy episode. The Blues dare each other to spend a night in a supposedly haunted pig castle. Of course, the “ghosts” are just pigs using bedsheets, pulleys, and a fog machine. But the episode cleverly inverts expectations: the pigs are more scared of the birds than the birds are of them. But it was within the block of Angry