The first season of (originally titled Wabbit: A Looney Tunes Production ) focuses on Bugs Bunny
Season 1 is characterized by its . Most episodes are divided into two 5-minute segments, mirroring the pacing of the original theatrical shorts from the 1940s and 50s. This format forces the comedy to be lean, mean, and incredibly visual. The Evolution of Bugs Bunny Wabbit- New Looney Tunes - Season 1
: Some segments, like "World Wide Wabbit," are praised for clever writing and great pacing. Others, such as "Snow Rabbit," have been criticized for feeling repetitive or dull due to a lack of dialogue. Art Style and Animation New Looney Tunes The first season of (originally
: Each 11-minute episode typically consists of two individual shorts. Notable Episodes The Bugs Bunny Reset: This Bugs is neither
If you skipped Wabbit because you thought it was just "another modern reboot," Season 1 is worth a revisit. It is a series that respects the legacy of the past while confidently stepping into the future—proving that you can’t keep a good rabbit down.
Wabbit shares his wisdom with his friends on how to succeed in life.
For decades, there was a pervasive fear among animation fans: the belief that the classic Looney Tunes magic was gone. Attempts to modernize the characters in the early 2000s—specifically Baby Looney Tunes and the polarizing Loonatics Unleashed —left purists cold. Then, in 2015, Warner Bros. Animation did something radical: they stopped trying to reinvent the wheel and started trying to spin it correctly again.