Angry Birds Space 1.1.0 ((top))
1.1.0 update Angry Birds Space , titled " Fry Me to the Moon
Angry Birds Space 1.1.0 represents a pivotal moment in the history of the legendary Rovio franchise. Released on April 25, 2012, this version introduced the game's first major content expansion after its record-breaking launch, fundamentally evolving the "out of this world" physics-based gameplay that defined the era. The "Fry Me to the Moon" Expansion Angry Birds Space 1.1.0
The Golden Egg That Wasn't There
Here’s a fun fact for completionists: Version 1.1.0 accidentally introduced a “phantom” Golden Egg location on level Pig Bang 1-3. You could tap an invisible pixel behind the second ice comet, triggering an Easter egg that played a retro Doom-style space shooter mini-game. Rovio patched this visual cue in 1.2.0, but the mini-game itself remained. If you still have an old iPad on iOS 5, that secret is waiting for you. Original 1
The centerpiece of the 1.1.0 update was the "Fry Me to the Moon" episode. This new chapter brought 10 additional levels to the Piggy Galaxy, offering a refreshing mix of icy terrains and explosive lunar puzzles. For fans who had already perfected their three-star runs on the base game's initial levels, these new challenges provided a much-needed difficulty spike. The level design in "Fry Me to the Moon" leaned heavily into the unique "Space" mechanic, where the line between a direct hit and a graceful orbital slingshot became thinner than ever. Released in the spring following the game’s initial
1.1.0 represents the "Vanilla Plus" experience.
Angry Birds Space was first released on March 22, 2012, and marked a significant departure from the traditional Angry Birds gameplay. The new installment introduced a 3D-like environment, complete with planets, stars, and zero-gravity physics. The game's storyline follows the Angry Birds as they attempt to rescue their eggs from the clutches of the evil pigs in outer space.
- Original 1.0.0: The level featured a rotating asteroid with a pig inside. Gravity was erratic. Players complained the pig was "invincible."
- Version 1.1.0: The rotation speed was slowed by 20%. Furthermore, Rovio added a small "gravity vent" on the left side of the asteroid. A veteran player could now fire the Lazer Bird (the yellow speedster) to the left, let it miss the asteroid entirely, loop around a distant planet, and come back to hit the pig from the rear. This "slingshot tutorial" is widely regarded as the signature moment of 1.1.0.
Released in the spring following the game’s initial launch in March 2012, Angry Birds Space version 1.1.0 wasn't just a bug-fix patch; it was a refinement of a revolution. It represents the moment the game truly found its footing, bridging the gap between nostalgic Earth-bound catapult action and the unpredictable vacuum of outer space.