Episode: Ground Hog Day (Level 1)
Level Number: 31
Terrain: The "Field of Dreams" (Farm-themed, featuring steep hills, wooden planks, and wide-open spaces)
By the time you reach 1-31, you have mastered the basic cart, the umbrella, and the TNT crate. However, this level introduces a brutal new constraint: distance versus stability. You cannot simply build a rocket sled and hope for the best. The level requires precision stopping and a fragile collection route.
The genius—and the cruelty—of Level 1-31 lies in its layout. When you first pull up the blueprint, you see a relatively standard starting grid on the far left. But looking to the right, the goal is not on a flat plane. It is elevated. bad piggies 1-31
The map is essentially a tale of two distinct sections:
The challenge is that a vehicle built for speed (wheels and engines) often lacks the traction or vertical capability to climb that final wall. Conversely, a vehicle built for climbing (spring boxes or propellers) often moves too slowly to get the momentum needed to reach the base of the cliff. You are forced to build a hybrid machine, and in Bad Piggies, hybrid machines are inherently unstable. Episode: Ground Hog Day (Level 1) Level Number:
Level 1-31 introduces a vertical challenge. The starting platform sits high above a series of wooden and stone structures, with a deep chasm in the middle. The goal flag is located on a lower, isolated ledge to the right. Scattered around are TNT crates, wooden planks, and one small fan.
To beat 1-31, you have to stop thinking like a race car driver and start thinking like a low-rider mechanic. The solution requires lowering the center of gravity. The challenge is that a vehicle built for
The Winning Build Strategy:
Execution: Once the vehicle is built low, you simply let gravity do the work. You don't need to accelerate (if you have a fan/tail rotor) on the way down; you need to brake by design. The low center of gravity keeps the vehicle glued to the floor during the chaotic drop. Once you hit the valley floor, the remaining momentum—conserved because you didn't crash—carries you up the final ramp to the finish line.