Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Misunderstood Pigs: New iOS game sees Angry Birds from the other side

Add as a preferred source on Google
Misunderstood-Pigs
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Over the past two years, we’ve seen Angry Birds rise from a simplistic mobile game into a full-blow franchise. The addictive nature of flinging disgruntled fowl at haphazardly built fortresses — not to mention the acute business acumen of its developer, Rovio Mobile — have resulted in more than 500 million downloads, a whole series of games, a movie, clothing, chuckable pillows and a guaranteed place in the pop-culture history books.

Despite all this grandeur, the concept behind the game is numbingly simple: Your characters, the so-called Angry Birds, want their eggs back from those dirty, thieving swine. But what if the villainous pigs really aren’t so bad. What if the birds are really the bad guys?

Recommended Videos

The answer is, essentially, the plot of a newly-released free game for iOS called Misunderstood Pigs (iTunes). Developer Gordon Hempton, the game’s creator, describes his game as the “inverse of Angry Birds.”

“The gameplay is simple: place objects to save the pigs from an impending onslaught of projectiles,” writes Hempton on his blog, CodeBrief.

That’s it. That’s the game.

The “objects” include boards, ice, planks, boxes and various other forms of Angry Birds-like building materials. “Projectiles” primarily include Angry Birds-like kamikaze characters. (At least, that’s all that showed up in the early levels we had a chance to play through.) And the environment is similar to Rovio’s game, but unique enough to differentiate it from its inspiration.

“I had been sitting on this game at 90% completion for at least 5 months, and decided to bite the bullet and spend a few days finishing the last 10%,” writes Hempton, an alumnus of renowned start-up incubator Y Combinator. In addition to making apps, Hempton also founded GroupTalent, a service that connects freelance developers and designers with project owners.

Released through the iTunes App Store on Tuesday, Misunderstood Pigs is entertaining and well-made, though it still has a slight work-in-progess matte coating that betrays its young age. As one commenter on Hacker News explains, the game needs music, the ads are annoying, there are a number of glitches to work out, and it’s too easy to win. But hey, it’s fun, and it’s free. So it would be uncouth to get overly up-in-arms about its early downfalls.

We will add that the movement of the various building pieces was often difficult to accomplish; other times, we couldn’t selected the pieces at all. Again, not a big deal, but something to take into consideration on the next update.

The cynical amongst you will likely criticize Misunderstood Pigs for its similarity to Angry Birds. And that’s fair. But it’s entirely beside the point. This game expands the Angry Birds world in a way that has never existed before. The plot thickens, as they say, and it gives the opportunity for versus gameplay that Angry Birds currently lacks.

If we were Rovio, we’d buy this game, give it the ol’ Angry Birds polish, and get those downloads over a billion.

Download Misunderstood Pigs from the iTunes App Store here.

Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
Topics
Netflix’s new horror game turns your phone into the controller, and it rings during gameplay
Unhinged offers two ways to play, a stakes-free Story Mode or a tense Standard Mode with a shrinking timer and checkpoint restarts.
netflix-unhinged-game

Netflix just unveiled Unhinged, and it might be the strangest thing the streamer has ever put in its games tab. Arriving June 30, this interactive horror story does not need a console or controller. Instead, your own smartphone becomes the entire interface, and you receive phone calls that ring straight through your actual device mid-game.

https://twitter.com/netflix/status/2069450411656794287

Read more
Devil May Cry just landed on your Switch 2 and it’s only $30 until July 7
All four characters, 60 FPS in handheld, and a $30 price that won't last past July 7.
Devil May Cry 5 arrives in Switch 2.

If you own a Switch 2 and have been waiting for a great hack-and-slash game to justify the purchase, today is a good day. 

Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition lands on the eShop on June 23, 2026, at limited-time discounted pricing. Given that it’s a game from a franchise that has sold over 38 million copies, that is a deal worth paying attention to.

Read more
Forget buying a Steam Machine, Valve wants you to build one
The company is improving desktop compatibility and working closely with Nvidia on future support.
Steam Machine LED Progress Bar

Valve's new Steam Machine may be grabbing headlines, primarily because of its price, but the bigger story could be that users won't necessarily need to buy one. Valve has confirmed that SteamOS is becoming increasingly desktop-friendly, opening the door for gamers to build their own Steam Machines using standard PC components and the operating system that powers the Steam Deck.

Valve wants SteamOS to work on more than just Valve hardware

Read more