Tubi, the popular free ad-supported streaming service, is set to expand its animated offerings with the addition of The Looney Tunes Show (2011-2013) starting April 1, 2025. While this isn’t the classic Looney Tunes catalog recently pulled from Max, it brings a modern twist on Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the gang to Tubi’s growing library. The move comes alongside a batch of other family-friendly titles, including several Scooby-Doo! specials and another Looney Tunes-adjacent series, reinforcing Tubi’s appeal as a no-cost haven for animation fans.
The Looney Tunes Show, which ran for two seasons from 2011 to 2013 on Cartoon Network, reimagines the iconic characters in a sitcom-style format, complete with suburban antics and voice talent like Jeff Bergman and Kristen Wiig. Unlike the bite-sized, slapstick shorts of the original Looney Tunes—removed from Max on March 16, 2025, amid its pivot from kids’ programming—this series offers 26 half-hour episodes blending humor and narrative arcs. While it lacks the vintage charm of the classics, its arrival on Tubi provides a fresh entry point for younger viewers or nostalgists curious about the reboot.
Joining The Looney Tunes Show on April 1 are three Scooby-Doo! direct-to-video specials: Scooby-Doo! And the Spooky Scarecrow (2013), Scooby-Doo! Ghastly Goals! (2014), and Scooby-Doo! Mecha Mutt Menace (2013). These bite-sized mysteries, each around 20-25 minutes, feature Scooby and the gang tackling haunted fields, soccer-field ghouls, and robotic menaces—perfect for quick, kid-friendly watches. Tubi’s also throwing in The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries (1995-2002), a 52-episode series that follows Sylvester, Tweety, and Granny solving crimes with a dash of classic Looney Tunes flair. It’s a deeper cut than the 2011 show, offering a bridge between old and new.
You can find the full list of everything coming to Tubi in April 2025 HERE.
Tubi’s timing taps into a post-Max void, where the loss of classic Looney Tunes left fans scrambling for alternatives. While this isn’t the hand-drawn golden age of Bugs and Porky, it’s a strategic grab of Warner Bros. content that fits Tubi’s model: free, ad-supported, and stacked with over 50,000 titles. The service, owned by Fox Corp., has leaned into animation lately—think LEGO Masters or Teen Titans Go!—to lure families without the subscription sting of Netflix ($15.49/mo.) or Disney+ ($7.99/mo.). Posts on X show enthusiasm tempered by sighs: “Wish it was the classics, but Tubi’s still a win.”
Available on smart TVs, phones, and beyond, these additions drop with no sign-up fee—just the usual 2-minute ad breaks every 15 minutes or so. For cord-cutters or budget watchers, Tubi’s April 1 lineup offers a cartoon lifeline, proving free streaming can still deliver, even if it’s not quite “That’s all, folks” vintage.
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