Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -episodes 10-20- Now

Piggy Island Chronicles: Diving into Angry Birds Toons Episodes 10-20

If you grew up flinging feathered projectiles at green, egg-stealing swine, Angry Birds Toons

was the ultimate expansion of that world. Spanning 104 episodes, these three-minute dialogue-free shorts captured the slapstick chaos of Piggy Island with surprisingly high animation quality.

While the series started strong, the middle of Season 1 (specifically episodes 10 through 20) is where the show really hit its stride, exploring the unique quirks of each bird and the bumbling desperation of the Bad Piggies. The Mid-Season Highlights (Episodes 10-20)

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. Angry Birds Toons 10-20 -Episodes 10-20-


Episode 12: "Where’s My Crown?" – King Pig’s Existential Crisis

This episode is a masterpiece of silent acting. King Pig wakes up to find his golden crown missing. Convinced it’s a bird conspiracy, he interrogates his own subjects—Forrest Pig, Mustache Pig, and the Corporal. But the truth is far more humiliating: he lost it while sleepwalking and trying to eat a giant cake.

Emotional core: Unlike most episodes, this one makes you feel for King Pig. His frantic searching, his tearful resignation, and finally his joy when he finds the crown atop a sleeping pig’s head—only to have it stolen by a seagull in the final shot. The cycle of slapstick tragedy continues.

Visual highlight: A montage of King Pig’s dream, where he dances with crown-shaped clouds, scored to a whimsical kazoo tune.


Episode 20: “Night of the Living Pigs”

Concept: Zombie parody (family-friendly).
Plot: A strange moon makes pigs move stiffly and moan “Eggggsss.” The birds hide until Red realizes they’re just sleepwalking.
Visual highlight: Pigs doing the Thriller dance while stealing eggs. Piggy Island Chronicles: Diving into Angry Birds Toons


Episode 20: "The Miracle of Life" – Surprisingly Emotional

This episode closes the 10-20 block on a tender note. A pig accidentally hatches a bird egg (warmth from a malfunctioning coffee machine). He raises the baby bird in secret, teaching it to oink. But when the baby bird instinctively flies to the birds’ nest, the pig must let go.

Why it’s unforgettable: For a show based on a mobile game about revenge, this episode is heartbreaking. The pig watches from a distance as the baby bird plays with The Blues. He sheds one tear, then wanders back to the pig castle. No explosions. No slingshots. Just a quiet meditation on loss and found family.

Fan reaction: Episode 20 is frequently cited as the reason Angry Birds Toons transcended its source material. It’s proof that slapstick and sincerity can coexist.


Overall Themes (Ep. 10–20)


The Shift from Gameplay to Sitcom

In the early episodes (1–9), the stakes were almost entirely egg-centric. The pigs stole the eggs, the birds attacked, and slapstick ensued. However, starting around Episode 10, the writers began to realize that the pigs were far more interesting as a civilization than as mere targets. Episode 12: "Where’s My Crown

Episodes 10–20 excel at what can only be described as "Pig Society Lore." We see the pigs not just as minions, but as citizens with hobbies, construction crews, and a bizarre caste system.

Episode 15: "Hatchling"

Synopsis: 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.

Why it stands out: Prepare for feels. Hatchling is widely considered the tear-jerker of the series. The relationship between the gruff pig and the innocent baby bird breaks the "us vs. them" barrier. Spoiler: The Corporal ends up building a sling to launch the baby bird back to its real family.

Episode 16: “Bomb’s Awakening”

Concept: Deep sleep comedy.
Plot: Bomb sleepwalks through Pig City, inadvertently destroying their new fortress. The pigs try to wake him gently—which makes him explode.
Fun fact: No dialogue, just snoring and explosion sound effects.