Bad Piggies 1-31

Before diving into the build, it is important to understand why Level 1-31 is so difficult. You are nearing the end of the first chapter (Ground Hog Day). Levels 1-29 and 1-30 introduced the concept of using balloons and TNT to lift the king pig to the goal.

By Level 1-31, the game throws a curveball: The Battery. Unlike balloons, which provide constant lift, the battery powers a small motor. This motor runs out of juice after a few seconds. Your challenge is to build a machine that travels upward and rightward before the battery dies, detonates a TNT crate to clear a path, and glides safely into the goal zone. bad piggies 1-31

The genius of Bad Piggies 1-31 is that it teaches indirect action. You are not blowing up the wall yourself; you are using the TNT as a projectile. The battery is intentionally weak. You cannot fly across the entire map. Instead, you use the motor only to position the TNT against the wall. The explosion does the heavy lifting of moving the pig. Before diving into the build, it is important

  • The Escape: As the TNT explodes, it will destroy the stone wall and create a shockwave. That shockwave will launch your pig (now separated from the destroyed chassis) to the right.
  • The Glide: Once the explosion clears, you will have a 1-second window where the pig is airborne. He will arc perfectly into the goal zone if you built the machine at the correct angle.
  • The main challenge is getting enough upward momentum after the downhill run to cross the gap and reach the crate. The Escape: As the TNT explodes, it will

    The objective of 1-31 seems standard: get the pig from point A to the finish line. However, the terrain is the antagonist here. You are faced with a steep, jagged descent followed by a sharp incline leading to the goal.

    The game provides you with a specific set of parts, usually forcing you to construct a tall, top-heavy vehicle. The trap? A standard four-wheeled cart will tip over immediately upon hitting the first bump, spilling the pig onto the asphalt in a humiliating failure.

    Before you hit "Start," run through this checklist: