Angry Birds is a physics-based puzzle game where you pull back a slingshot, aim a bird, and launch it at structures sheltering green pigs — with the goal of popping every pig on the field using as few birds as possible. Each bird type has a unique mid-air ability, and each structure is built from glass, wood, or stone that responds differently to impact. Play this free online game in your browser on PLRun with no download needed.
Angry Birds launched the most recognizable franchise in mobile gaming history. Originally released in December 2009 by Finnish studio Rovio Entertainment, the game puts you in control of a flock of wingless birds whose eggs have been stolen by mischievous green pigs. Your weapon is a slingshot. Your ammunition is the birds themselves. The objective on every level is the same: destroy the pig-sheltering structures by launching birds into them, using physics — gravity, momentum, and material fragility — to cause maximum collapse.
What makes players return after more than a decade is the gap between simple controls and deep strategy. Pulling back the slingshot takes one second to learn, but earning three stars on a tough level requires reading the structure's weak points, choosing the right bird for the right material, and triggering chain reactions through TNT crates and load-bearing supports. As an HTML5 browser game on PLRun, it loads instantly on desktop, tablet, or mobile — the same satisfying destruction physics that defined a generation of casual gaming, accessible without any installation.
Click and drag the slingshot backward to set the angle and power of your shot, then release to launch the bird. While a bird is mid-flight, click the screen to activate its special ability. On mobile, tap and drag the slingshot, then tap again mid-air for the ability. You can also scroll the screen horizontally and zoom in or out to survey the full level layout before taking your shot. Press the restart button to replay a level at any time.
Each level places a set of green pigs inside or behind structures made from glass, wood, and stone. You are given a fixed roster of birds loaded into the slingshot in a specific order. Pop every pig on the field to clear the level. If you run out of birds before all pigs are eliminated, the level fails — but you can retry immediately with no penalty. Clearing a level unlocks the next one in sequence.
The strategic core of Angry Birds is matching each bird's ability to the right target. Red is a balanced starter with no special ability but decent impact. The Blues split into three smaller birds mid-flight and are devastating against glass. Chuck accelerates forward at high speed when tapped and tears through wood. Bomb explodes on impact or when tapped, and his blast radius destroys stone blocks that resist almost everything else. Matilda drops an explosive egg downward when tapped while she launches upward, effective against rooftops and structures with exposed tops. Hal boomerangs backward when tapped, useful for hitting targets behind cover. Terence has no ability but is extremely heavy and plows through any material on sheer mass alone.
Structures are built from three materials with distinct properties. Glass is the weakest — almost any bird shatters it, and The Blues are especially effective. Wood is mid-tier — Chuck's speed boost slices through it, and Hal handles it well. Stone is the strongest — most birds bounce off it, but Bomb's explosion and Terence's mass break it reliably. Beyond material type, structural physics matter: blocks stacked on narrow supports topple when the support is destroyed, heavy stone on top of wood can crush a structure when the wood gives way, and TNT crates chain-react into nearby blocks. Reading a structure's architecture before shooting is as important as aiming accurately.
After clearing a level, you receive one to three stars based on your score. Points come from destroying individual blocks, popping pigs (5,000 points each), and conserving birds (10,000 points per unused bird). This means the most efficient solution — destroying the most structure with the fewest birds — earns the highest stars. Three-starring a level often requires finding a single devastating angle that collapses the entire structure in one or two shots rather than methodically picking off pigs one at a time.
Scroll right to see the entire structure before launching. Many levels place TNT crates, narrow support pillars, or heavy stone blocks on weak foundations far from the slingshot. Identifying these vulnerabilities first lets you plan a sequence that causes chain-reaction collapses rather than chipping away at the surface. The difference between one star and three stars is almost always about finding the structure's critical weak point before firing.
Launching The Blues at a stone wall wastes them entirely because they cannot damage stone. Launching Bomb at a glass structure works but wastes his unique strength against stone. The optimal sequence is: The Blues for glass sections, Chuck for wood panels, Bomb for stone walls. When a structure mixes materials, aim each bird at the section it is best suited to destroy. This bird-material matching is the single most important strategic concept in the game.
Chuck's speed boost drives him forward in a straight line, making him lethal against horizontal wooden planks stacked in his path. Vertical wood columns, however, absorb much of his lateral force. When facing a wooden structure, angle Chuck so his trajectory runs parallel to the longest wooden beams — he will cut through multiple layers in sequence, causing far more structural damage than hitting a single vertical post.
Bomb's real power is his blast area, not his collision. Landing Bomb directly on a stone block destroys that one block, but detonating him in a gap between multiple stone sections sends shockwaves into all of them simultaneously. Aim Bomb at the center of dense stone clusters or next to TNT crates rather than at individual blocks. One well-placed explosion can clear an area that would take three or four other birds to dismantle.
Matilda's ability fires an explosive egg downward while she continues upward. This makes her ideal for levels where pigs sit on top of structures — tap her ability while she is directly overhead, and the egg drops onto the roof while her upward trajectory clears any tall obstacles. Using Matilda to attack from above bypasses the front-facing defenses that the level designer placed to absorb horizontal shots.
Terence is a blunt instrument — maximum mass, no finesse. Using him early wastes his power on structures that lighter birds could handle. Save him for the densest remaining section after other birds have cleared the fragile parts. A single Terence shot into a compromised stone structure often triggers a complete collapse that earns the unused-bird bonus on the remaining roster and pushes your score toward three stars.
Shooting a bird directly at a pig pops that one pig. Shooting the same bird at the wooden beam supporting the pig's platform collapses everything above it — popping the pig plus destroying the structure for bonus points. Always look for the load-bearing element. If a pig sits on a stone slab resting on a wooden pillar, destroying the pillar drops the stone onto whatever is below, creating a chain reaction that earns far more points than a direct hit ever would.
Please share by clicking this button!
Visit our site and see all other available articles!