See here for the main list of the franchise.
Main Duo
- Adaptational Friendship: In the original shorts, they were frenemies with Daffy openly disliking and antagonizing Bugs. In this show, they are friends, if still vitriolic, and Daffy no longer tries to sabotage Bugs' success.
- Bromantic Foil: Bugs is cool, charismatic, intelligent, and kind-hearted whilst Daffy is foolish, selfish, rude, and obnoxious.
- Butt-Monkey: Unlike the original shorts (where Daffy was the only Butt-Monkey and Bugs the Invincible Hero), in this show, both Daffy and Bugs can be often unlucky, and suffer slapstick and misfortunes, though Bugs is also very often portrayed as being Born Lucky while Daffy mostly just has bad luck.
- Character Exaggeration: In the original shorts, the main difference between them is that Bugs thinks before acting, while Daffy acts before thinking, that's why he always loses. In this show, this is exaggerated to the point that Bugs is a genius who even wins a Nobel Prize, while Daffy is an idiot who can't even write his own name.
- Cool Kid-and-Loser Friendship: They’re a grown-up version of this trope. Bugs is an extremely smart and talented Ace, and has a magnetic charm that makes everyone love him immediately after meeting him (with just a few rare exceptions like Cecil Turtle), while Daffy is stupid, obnoxious, selfish, and detested by most of the people who meet him. This is made especially obvious in "Reunion", where Bugs goes with Daffy to Daffy’s high school reunion and Bugs is the life of the party and gets kissed on the cheek by two women while Daffy ends up humiliating himself and getting mocked by everyone at the reunion (except Porky), and it’s revealed that Daffy was a geeky Bully Magnet in high school who was so unpopular that even other nerds wouldn’t sit with him at lunch, while Bugs spent his teen years doing many incredible things like starring in movies, going to space, playing professional football, etc.
- Gleeful and Grumpy Pairing: Especially in the early first season, they often have this dynamic, with the energetic and oblivious Daffy being Gleeful, and the low-key, Only Sane Man Bugs being Grumpy. In a bizarre sense, despite this series incarnations staying true to the basic fundamentals of their classic personas, Bugs and Daffy were the opposite in the original cartoons where Daffy was usually more grumpy and Bugs was more gleeful.
- Heterosexual Life-Partners: They live in the same house, often act Like an Old Married Couple, and they both have declared the other their best friend.
- In Touch with His Feminine Side: Mostly Daffy, who suffers from serious gender confusion. However, both of them are shown cross-dressing quite a few times.
- Odd Friendship: They are total opposites. As revealed in the first episode, Bugs doesn't quite understand how he tolerates Daffy, but the two are best friends.
- Red Oni, Blue Oni: As usual, Daffy serves as the impulsive, overacting, and obnoxious Red Oni, while Bugs is the calm, cool, and intelligent Blue Oni.
- Straight Man and Wise Guy: Oddly enough, Bugs is placed in the serious Straight Man role in this show, and acts like a normal person would react to Daffy's antics.
- Vitriolic Best Buds: Although they have a different dynamic than usual. In the classic shorts, Daffy finds Bugs annoying, while Bugs is usually indifferent or amused by Daffy's attitude. In this show, Bugs is the one who is always annoyed by Daffy.
- With Friends Like These...: Daffy is a very rude, selfish, and inconsiderate friend who is always mooching off Bugs and taking advantage of his generosity.

Bugs Bunny lives a life of upper-middle-class suburban leisure, based off residual income from a popular Carrot Peeler that he invented. He lives in a well-appointed house, drives a compact car, and provides room and board for his friend, Daffy Duck.
- Accidental Celebrity: In Monster Talent, he accidentally becomes famous for saying a line in Speedy’s commercial, which he didn’t even want to be in.
- The Ace: In earlier episodes, he's quite true to his roots, where he even wins the Nobel Prize. Later episodes have made his flaws more explicit.
- The ace that Bugs was in the classic cartoons is heavily deconstructed in this show. In the shorts, Bugs almost always managed to outsmart others because he was up against someone who was a complete idiot or very ego-driven and gullible. Whenever he had to face someone who had any sense of intelligence (like Cecil or the Gremlins) he was less likely to come out on top. Because he was so use to winning in the shorts, he would break down, crack, and get really addictive when he got outsmarted. In this series, because the world he lives in is more advanced and the people around him behave more normally as opposed to being cartoonishly gullbile, Bugs is less likely to outsmart people and his more vulnerable and addictive sides are shown a lot more often.
- Adaptational Badass: He manages to outwit Cecil the Turtle, who was the only opponent Bugs never won against in any of the original Golden age shorts the latter appeared in.
- Adaptational Intelligence:
- He was always an intelligent character, but more in a nonchalant Street Smart way. In this show, he is apparently an academic genius and a Science Hero who won the Nobel Prize.
- In this show, he even manages to outsmart Cecil Turtle, something he always failed to do in the classic cartoons.
- Adaptational Wimp: Downplayed. Bugs is still intelligent and clever like in the classic cartoons but (because he lives in a more advanced modern day society where people are smarter and less easily tricked) Bugs doesn't get the chance to outsmart as many people as he usually does. Also, his main Fatal Flaw of being addicted and obsessive over things is much more apparent this time around.
- Adaptation Personality Change: Downplayed, but notable. Bugs in this show is more of a Deconstruction of his classic persona. He's still generally calm and collected and usually a Nice Guy unless he's provoked, but he's more likely to let people get under his skin and react with annoyance — where the classic Bugs would happily get along with everyone until they crossed a line, whereupon he decided "this means war" and go all Karmic Trickster on them. This change is likely due to the fact that he lives in a more tolerable, advanced, modern day suburban neighborhood as opposed to the original cartoons where he was always living amongst chaos and had to outsmart characters that were gullible idiots. This Bugs is far more cynical and grouchy; he's more likely to react to the chaos around him with some sour comments and deadpan expression, and he rarely takes revenge (mostly because he's living in an environment where he doesn't need to react like his classic persona did). He still has his moments, particularly in Casa de Calma and Customer Service, but this is probably the grumpiest incarnation of Bugs ever to grace the screen... very likely because without those cartoonish revenge schemes, he doesn't have an outlet anymore. He's notably happier whenever he gets carried away with something and just allows himself to be part of the chaos.
- Always Someone Better: To Daffy, but it's downplayed compared to the original shorts. Daffy's jealousy of him only comes up a few times, like in the bowling episode where he's upset about everyone liking Bugs more than him.
- Ambiguously Jewish: Less so than in other adaptations, but the accent's still there.
- Art Shift: Bugs in the first season has a more geometric character design with a purple fur color. From season 2 and on though, his character designed was changed to resemble his usual look.
- Attractive Bent-Gender: When he disguises himself as a woman, Daffy, Speedy, and Cecil all find him very attractive. Although, Lola thought he was an ugly woman.
- Best Friend: He has been called "best friend" by Daffy (several times), Yosemite Sam ("Mr. Wiener"), and Rodney Rabbit ("Best Friends Redux").Yosemite Sam: I need the emotional support. You're my best friend.
Bugs: What?!
Yosemite Sam: Nothing. I, I didn't say nothing. - Beware the Nice Ones: He's usually a chill guy despite being Surrounded by Idiots, but piss him off enough, and he becomes a Karmic Trickster who will ruin your life, as Cecil learns the hard way.Bugs: Of course you realize, This Means War!
- Born Lucky: Bugs attracts beautiful women and does great at almost everything he tries, having proven himself to be talented at acting, football, tennis, bowling, cooking, building sand castles, etc. He’s also brilliant enough that he can build a time machine, and practically everyone who meets him instantly loves him. Also, since he invented the carrot peeler, he gets royalty checks which provide him enough money to live a comfortable upper middle-class life and support Daffy without a job. This is downplayed in season 2, due to all the slapstick and misfortune he suffers, though he still has his lucky moments, being better off than Daffy and especially Porky.
- Brutal Honesty: At times.Daffy: [after he watches a basketball game] That's it! I figured it out! I finally know what I'm going to do with my life: be a professional basketball player!
Bugs: You're three-and-a-half feet tall.
Daffy: [groans] You know, you're a real dream killer. I hope you don't ever have children. - Butt-Monkey: Occasionally a victim of this, due to being the Only Sane Man. He's one of the show's favorite targets for slapstick. This is especially in some episodes of season 2, where we see him getting punched in the stomach by Yosemite Sam (who was trying to give him the Heimlich maneuver), getting hit by Porky in his car, getting lost in the desert, being violently catapulted against a car, being imprisoned for one year, and undergoing Sanity Slippage a couple of times. Granted, he still has much better luck than Daffy and Porky.
- Can't Live With Them, Can't Live Without Them: Lola annoys him to no end, but he becomes distraught when he believes she broke up with him in one episode. He also gets jealous when she pretends to show interest in Daffy. He also feels the same way about Daffy. Even though Daffy drives Bugs nuts with his stupidity, rudeness, and selfishness, he makes Bugs’ life more interesting, and in Here Comes The Pig, he grows bored when Daffy’s not around.
- Catchphrase: Do we really need to say it?
- Celebrity is Overrated: In Monster Talent, he becomes famous for saying a line in Speedy’s commercial, but he almost immediately gets sick of it since everyone who sees him pesters him to say his line.
- Character Exaggeration: Inverted. His Karmic Trickster shtick is extremely played down, leaving him as the snarky Straight Man.
- Chick Magnet: Lola is crazy about him, he manages to win over a famous actress in "Casa de Calma", two women kiss him on the cheeks in “Reunion”, and we see two other women fighting over him in "Eligible Bachelors".
- Cloudcuckoolander's Minder: When the series begins, this is his dynamic for Daffy. He manages to pass that duty off to Tina, only to end up as Lola's minder.
- Deadpan Snarker: Especially towards Daffy, but nobody's safe from Bugs's insults. He was actually happy about spending some time in prison because there he got to insult all the other inmates all he wanted and they weren't allowed to hurt him over it.
- Deconstructed Character Archetype: Of his classic persona. In modern day suburbia, someone like Bugs would be more of an everyday, easygoing but snarky Nice Guy. It also points out that Bugs is less likely to come out on top in a more advanced society where he is not up against gullible idiots like in the old cartoons.
- Deconstructed Trope: Bugs’ gimmick of dressing in drag in the original cartoons made many of his foils fall head of heels for him and find his feminine persona attractive. It was all Played for Laughs as to the audience, Bugs' outfits were more ugly than attractive. This series points out how a male rabbit in tacky feminine outfits would not be found attractive in the modern age and is referred to as "ugly" by Lola, despite Bugs always denying he is an ugly woman. Zigzagged in that while Lola thinks Bugs looks ugly disguised as a woman, multiple male characters think he looks like a very attractive woman.
- Famed in Story: In-Universe, he’s famous for many impressive past achievements, such as being a movie star, a football player, an astronaut, etc. He’s also treated like a celebrity in Monster Talent after saying a line in Speedy’s commercial.
- Fatal Flaw: His biggest flaw is that he tends to have an addictive personality. Several episodes focus on Bugs getting hooked on something, such as energy drinks (though this one is somewhat justified since it was deliberately made to be addictive). This flaw is actually very fitting to Bugs classic persona. In the original cartoons, Bugs was normally calm, cool, and level-headed but only because he was often up against someone who was very easy to trick. In the old cartoons where he was up against characters like Cecil Turtle, Bugs shows that he can be very addictive and obsessive over something because he's not used to be the butt end of the joke.
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Phlegmatic/Leukine.
- Friend to All Children: Has shades of this that is mostly seen with his relationship with Gossamer.
- Gadgeteer Genius: In Peel of Fortune, he builds a time machine, in less than a minute.
- Green-Eyed Epiphany: Had this when Lola pretended to have a crush on Daffy. He tries to get her attention, call her pretty, and winds up insisting that he is her boyfriend, which prompts her to tell him to repeat that. He refuses, but it's okay, because she got the whole thing on tape.
- Informed Attractiveness: Whenever Bugs is cross-dressing, other characters are bound to comment on whether they consider him attractive or ugly. His girlfriend, Lola, always believes he looks like an ugly woman while he gets some head-turning reactions from male characters like Daffy and Cecil. In one episode, Speedy falls in love with one of his female dance class students (Bugs in disguise) and even bought an engagement ring, and he becomes heartbroken when he realizes she’s actually Bugs.
- Innocently Insensitive: Downplayed since it doesn't happen often, but whenever he interacts with Witch Lezah, he tends to bring up witch stereotypes that she immediately shoots down, reminiscent of someone asking slightly racist questions out of ignorance rather than malice. Like when she asked him to babysit Gossamer:Bugs: Where are you going?
Lezah: To the fifth dimension.
Bugs: Ooh, is that where you're from?
Lezah: What?! Honey, I'm from Chicago! (...) I was wondering if you could babysit at MY house.
Bugs: I've never stayed at a haunted house before.
Lezah: You make a LOT of assumptions. - Living Emotional Crutch: To Lola. When she mistakenly believes that he broke up with her in "Dear John", she is so distraught that she decides to leave to a Buddhist monastery.
- Loved by All: Bugs is instantly adored by almost everyone he meets, as shown in a number of episodes.
- In "Members Only", Lola fell madly in love with him after one date with him, and Lola’s parents liked him so much after meeting him for a few seconds that they were perfectly fine with Lola wanting to marry him, with Walter calling Bugs the son he never had.
- In "Monster Talent", Daffy says that Bugs was born with friends and that he "has too many friends", and everyone in town loves him for saying one line in Speedy’s commercial, with Speedy saying he chose Bugs for the role because he has a "likability factor" that makes people want to party with him.
- In To Bowl or Not to Bowl, the members of Daffy’s bowling team (Porky, Marvin, and Pete) all like Bugs more than Daffy, and Pete says they should rename their team after Bugs. Daffy expresses jealousy that everyone likes Bugs more than him and thinks Bugs is better-looking, smarter, and more talented than him.
- In Year of the Duck, Bugs opens a fortune cookie and his fortune tells him he’s charming and well-liked. He then gets a letter saying he’s been asked to host a beauty pageant because he’s charming and well-liked in the community.
- Master of Disguise: As always. He often disguises himself as a woman, and it fools everyone who sees him (though Lola thought he was an ugly woman).
- Mundane Made Awesome: In Monster Talent, everyone acts like Bugs saying “I like it” is the most amazing thing in the world.
- Must Have Caffeine: Bugs is usually shown with a cup of coffee every morning. One episode revolves around him having to stay off the stuff for a while, instead getting addicted to an energy drink called Spargle. After that becomes a problem, Dr. Weisberg tells him that one cup is alright... although the size of the cup was never specified.
- Mythology Gag: His birthday is July 27. That day in 1940 A Wild Hare was released.
- Nice Guy: He's snarky and grouchy, but Bugs is one of the easiest characters to get along with. Even with all his snark and tendency to roll his eyes at everyone else, he's generous and forgiving to a fault.
- Not So Above It All:
- He's not without his foibles. He can be just as obsessive as Daffy, and unwilling to admit when he's wrong or has made a mistake.
- He's surprisingly not good with do-it-yourself carpentry, considering all the failure coming from trying to build a shelf.
- He seems to be only person in the entire world who did not know on first sight that Poochie is not a dog.
- A recurring theme in the earlier episodes is that Bugs has led such a charmed life that he finds a lot of stuff ordinary people dread to be fascinating. This includes high school reunions, office jobs, and even prison. Needless to say, the people with him in those environments do not share his enthusiasm.
- Official Couple: With Lola Bunny as of "Double Date", when he finally grows out of his She's Not My Girlfriend phase, and admits they have a relationship.
- Only Friend: In the first episode, Bugs is said to be Daffy’s only friend. However, Daffy starts hanging out with Porky, too, shortly after this.
- Only Sane by Comparison: Especially in season 2. While definitely much more level-headed than his roommate Daffy, several episodes show he's still a Looney Tune and just as prone to losing his head as the others. Examples include buying a restaurant he didn't know how to run just so he could have a Friday night hangout, destroying his house in an attempt to install a shelf to display his Nobel Peace Prize rather than hiring someone to do it, ending up in an Albanian prison following a convoluted plot to avoid going to a peach festival with Porky, getting addicted to an energy drink called Spargle and going on a rampage to get more, and attempting to serve carrot PIE rather than cake at a dinner party. Also several episodes revolve around him getting addicted to things such as coffee, a video game, or Porky's catering.
- Only Sane Man: Easily the sanest, smartest person on the show, though even he has his irrational moments.
- Righteous Rabbit: Bugs has a high sense of morality in this series.
- Sanity Slippage: His caffeine addiction makes him extremely energetic and jittery. When he tries to kick his caffeine addiction, he just winds up hooked on Spargle, which turns him into a paranoid junkie.
- Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl: The Savvy Guy to Lola's Energetic Girl. He's the grounded Only Sane Man to Lola's insane Genki Girl.
- Science Hero: He hardly ever uses that skill set, but it's there.
- Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: The Manly Man to Daffy and Porky's Sensitive Guys.
- She's Not My Girlfriend: He went through a stage like this with Lola. Eventually she tricked him into a relationship.
- Sitcom Character Archetypes: Square, Wisecracker and Sage.
- Straight Man: He is a serious foil to the wackiness of most people he interacts with, especially Daffy and Lola. He has also played this role for Yosemite Sam and occasionally Porky.
- Supporting Protagonist: In season 1 because Daffy has major spotlight. He gets more screentime and plots to himself in season 2.
- Trademark Favorite Food: Carrots, as always. Coffee seems to be his favorite drink.

Daffy Duck is the roommate of Bugs Bunny. Unlike Bugs and their neighbors, Daffy has no way of earning money and relies on Bugs for food and shelter. While Daffy's greed and jealousy of Bugs remains, it appears less antagonistic in the show.
- Achievements in Ignorance: He willingly signed up for the Marines and made it completely through training despite completely misunderstanding what the Marines actually were.
- Acrophobic Bird: Despite being a bird that, for all intents and purposes, should be able to fly, he never does so, except once when he went paragliding. On a side note, he can't swim either. This is lampshaded in the episode "We're in Big Truffle". At one point, Porky and Daffy are chased up a tree by a bear, and Porky requests that Daffy fly them to safety. Daffy says that he can't fly, to which Porky points out that he's a duck, only for Daffy to say that he's not that kind of duck. Then Porky finds out that Daffy can't swim, and we get this...Porky: You c-c-c-can't fly, you c-c-c-can't swim... ARE YOU EVEN A D-D-D-DUCK AT ALL?!
Daffy: I'm not sure. [points at beak] This comes off very easily. [takes off beak to prove his point] - Adaptational Dumbass: In the original shorts - at least, in his most iconic personalities - he was fairly intelligent and clever, but occasionally gullible and was often defeated due to his greed, angrier side, and selfishness. His lazy and idiot sides show a lot more here, as well as his ignorance. For example, the 1961 short "The Abominable Snow Rabbit" shows him being more knowledgeable than Bugs about geography and being annoyed by the latter's ignorance, while in this show he's more Book Dumb than Bugs about everything.
- Adaptation Personality Change: Downplayed. Daffy's personality is mostly the same but there are also some noticeable differences:
- He is a good deal more effeminate and less book-smart than his counterpart from the original cartoons.
- He's a great deal less malicious in his jealousy of Bugs, with most of their conflict stemming not from Daffy actively trying to sabotage Bugs but more from the fact that he's so self-absorbed and looking for an easy road to success that his hijinks often get Bugs or Porky sucked into them. Notably, the only episodes where he sees Bugs as a rival are "Casa De Calma" and "To Bowl or Not to Bowl" (the former is very similar to classic shorts, while in the latter he admits his inferiority complex to Bugs rather than antagonizing him).
- One of his defining traits in this show is being a Lazy Bum, something he took from the Duck Dodgers series, but Daffy was actually an eager Determinator in the classic shorts.
- All Men Are Perverts: And so are male ducks, apparently.
- In "Casa De Calma", Daffy spends the episode hitting on a beautiful actress, wanting her purely for her looks and not even bothering to remember her name.
- In "Working Duck", a brief joke implies Daffy looks at internet porn.
- All of the Other Reindeer: In "Reunion", it’s revealed that in high school, he was the biggest nerd in school, and all his classmates bullied him and called him "Daffy Dork". He was so unpopular that even Marvin and Pete, who were also nerds, wouldn’t sit with him at lunch.
- All Take and No Give: Downplayed. Many of his relationships (especially with Bugs and Porky, mostly the latter) often involve making them do all his dirty work and chores without so much as a reward or compensation, particularly in "The Float". However, several of his Pet the Dog moments involve him trying to give something (e.g. he seems willing to share a truffle with Porky in "We're in Big Truffle" and he later risks losing it to save his life).
- Anti-Hero: Usually. Sometimes crosses the line into Villain Protagonist.
- The Anti-Nihilist: On the occasions where he acts particularly crazy. He can sometimes go on whimsical rants about how worthless someone/something is while displaying a cheerful attitude about it. Not that anyone acknowledges him doing it.
- Anti-Role Model: Daffy is an idiot, a very rude and selfish person, an egomaniac, he has terrible hygiene and abysmal eating habits, he’s an unemployed Lazy Bum who mooches off his friends, and he often commits crimes, such as theft and impersonating a police officer. Clearly, he’s not someone the audience is meant to emulate.
- Asshole Victim: Various episodes have him being beaten down and punished, largely brought on by his own actions.
- Athletically Challenged: He is absolutely terrible at most sports, like basketball, running, swimming, or any physical exercise. Oddly enough, he's shown to be a decent tennis player in "Father Figures" (especially compared to Lola and her father), even though in the previous episode "Members Only" he was bad at this sport too.
- Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!: It seems Daffy has a severe case of this.
- Attention Whore: As usual.
- Ax-Crazy: They don't call him Daffy Duck for nothing, and brother, trust us when we say that he would put the original iteration of Daffy to shame.
- Best Friend:
- To Bugs, as Daffy openly describes Bugs as his best friend, something he would never do in classic cartoons. Bugs also admits Daffy is his best friend in the pilot, that's why he lets him live in his house and tolerates his rudeness and freeloading.
- To Porky. While Daffy is usually mean or even abusive to him, some season 2 episodes show that Daffy cares about their friendship deep down, and at the end of "Best Friend Redux", Daffy admits that Porky is his second best friend. On the other hand, Porky is extremely patient and always treats Daffy as a close friend, despite the latter's horrible behavior.
- Big Eater: He apparently eats ribs covered in marshmallows and tops it with layers of powdered sugar for dinner every night.
- Book Dumb: He can't read or write, can't answer even the simplest trivia questions correctly, and doesn't know the concept of time.
- Boomerang Bigot: Daffy mocks Gossamer's idea of singing for being "feminine" yet Daffy often cross dresses in women's clothing.
- Brilliant, but Lazy: On occasion, he reveals he can be genuinely competent at a job, but for one reason or another he decides to give it up and revert to being lazy.
- Brutal Honesty: He often has literally no issues speaking his mind, which has been lampshaded several times. It also drives everyone crazy except for Foghorn Leghorn, who sees him as an Honest Advisor.Bugs: Hey, Daffy, look! Poochy's back.
Daffy: Oh, did he go somewhere? Was it the dump? He smells like he went to the dump. - Camp Straight: There is a Running Gag that he has feminine traits, like enjoying handbags, wearing heels, or being a good hairdresser and cosmetologist. However, he is in a relationship with Tina.
- Card-Carrying Jerkass: In "The Float", he tells Bugs that the reason he needs something flashy and extravagant like a parade float or a yacht is to distract people from seeing what a horrible person he is. In "That’s My Baby", he also tells Bugs that he’s not a bummer, he’s a jerk.
- Chaotic Stupid: It seems in place of the adversarial or malicious roles he played in the old shorts, this time around, he's just so damned stupid and self-absorbed that his antics are almost guaranteed to cause some form of mayhem to someone, typically Porky and/or Bugs.
- Character Development: In Season 2, while still kinda jerkish, he has more redeeming moments than he did in the first season.
- Cloudcuckoolander: Has bizarre fantasies, opinions, and random whims.
- Comedic Sociopathy: Most of his self-absorbed antics are Played for Laughs.
- Composite Character: He's somewhat of a mix of his original depiction as an absolutely bonkers duck and his more scheming depiction when he later co-starred with Bugs. From his earlier form, he is obviously not of sound mind, and in fact is possibly even more insane than he ever was in the original shorts. On the other, he's incredibly greedy and self-absorbed, and always scheming for a plan to get him fame or fortune in one form or another. Also, while academics are not his strong point, he is shown to be remarkably intelligent on certain niche topics, and can come up with some impressively clever (if sometimes overly complicated) schemes on his own.
- Consummate Liar: As revealed in "Reunion" he's able to make up ridiculous lies right on the spot and tell them with complete conviction. Unlike most examples of this trope, however, he doesn't manage his ability very well—he has to take Bugs to the reunion with him to keep track of all the lies he's told to different people, since they all contradict each other.
- Creepy Crossdresser: Zig Zagged with Wholesome Crossdresser. He crossdresses and uses female mannerisms very frequently, and honestly, he pulls it off well, but the "creepy" part comes in not from his appearance, but from the fact that this is still Daffy we're talking about, with all of his antics and behaviour included.
- Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Though he is a lying, idiotic coward, Daffy is in fact a former U.S Marine and was sent in on a mission to rescue American prisoners of war from a foreign camp, and when he attempted to apply for a job at an internet service provider, he was told he was overqualified, due to having been a former CEO.
- The Ditz: Like Lola, though not quite as much as her, he has his ditzy moments. In “Eligible Bachelors”, for example, he repeatedly asks Granny if she died while she was telling him her experience in World War II. He apparently doesn't know who Superman is, either.
- Dreadful Musician: He attempts to learn to play the piano in "The Grand Old Duck of York", and he is awful. The only way Granny, his teacher, can stand being around him is when is using headphones to block out the noise. Sylvester loses the will to try and eat Tweety, who walks inside of Sylvester's mouth to escape Daffy's playing. In the end, she gives him a gold star just to get rid of him.
- Drives Like Crazy: As shown in "DMV".
- Dumbass Has a Point: As dumb as Daffy is, he still makes valid points every so often. Since Daffy was often a selfish jerk on this show, too, this also doubles as Jerkass Has a Point.
- In "Devil Dog", he learns that what Bugs thinks is a dog is really a Tasmanian Devil. Bugs ironically doesn't buy it at first, probably because it's Daffy trying to warn him.
- In "The Foghorn Leghorn Story", the eponymous rooster casts Daffy to play him in a movie about his life. Daffy accepts but does still point out that it's odd to cast him since he isn't a rooster or even an actor.
- In "Sunday Night Slice", Porky refuses to eat sausage because it's made from pig, but he still eats pepperoni. Daffy notes the irony, but Porky doesn't realize that pepperoni is also made from pig.
- In "Year of the Duck", Lola states that she thought Daffy was an animal with beaver tail and beaver teeth. Daffy points out she is thinking of a beaver.
- In "Bobcats on Three", he tells Gossamer to not eat desserts, because he’s still training. Considering how important it is to eat healthy food and how Gossamer was getting ready to partake in a swimming sport, he’s got a point.
- In "Semper Lies", when Bugs tell Daffy that he hated going to Peach Festival with Porky because how horrible it is (it takes 6 hours to get there, it’s a middle of a hot desert with mosquitos, and have to stand in long lines for peach related food including peach sandwiches and soup) Daffy first said to lie, but quickly change his mind because that his "role". Daffy even suggested to Bugs that he should just simply tell Porky he doesn’t want to go to the festival.
- Embarrassing Nickname: In "Reunion", it’s revealed that in high school, everyone called him "Daffy Dork".
- Foul Waterfowl: A duck who is almost sociopathic.
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Choleric/Melancholic.
- Freudian Excuse: His childhood... wasn't the best growing up. From what little snippets he actually remembers about it, it's fairly clear why he so mentally and emotionally unwell.
- The Friend Nobody Likes: Downplayed. While Tina, Foghorn, Gossamer and (sometimes) Granny genuinely like him, few other characters can stand being around him for long. He also gets along with Lola, though this is not that surprising. Bugs and Porky, at least, seem to tolerate him, but even they have limits to how long they're willing to spend in his presence, if only for their own wellbeing if nothing else.
- Friend to All Children: Despite how much of a jerk he is, he's surprisingly good with children, especially when caring for Tina's baby nephew, Zachary.
- Furry Reminder: In the first episode, he eats a raw fish and swallows it whole like a real-life duck would.
- Genius Ditz: He's a talented licensed-cosmetologist.
- Greed: He literally conned Porky out of all his money so he could buy a yacht and he's very shameless about his selfishness and materialism.
- Green-Eyed Monster: In multiple episodes, Daffy is shown to be prone to jealousy, as usual.
- In "Casa De Calma", shows jealousy of Bugs for picking up a beautiful actress.
- In "To Bowl or Not to Bowl", Daffy admits he’s jealous of Bugs because everyone they meet likes Bugs more and thinks Bugs is smarter, better-looking, and more talented than Daffy.
- In "Best Friends Redux", Daffy becomes jealous of Rodney Rabbit because he thinks Bugs likes Rodney more than him.
- Hated by All: Downplayed. Most people tolerate Daffy at best and dislike him at worst, and even the people who do like him aren't always fond of him (for good reasons). When he's cast as Mrs. Porkbunny in Bugs and Porky's carrot cake commercial, the general public (minus Foghorn) is repulsed enough by the character that it ruins their entire business.
- The Heckler: At the beginning of "Sunday Night Slice", he heckles a baseball player trying to pitch, much to everyone's annoyance. But he crosses the line by calling the player a "terrible husband and father" and doing an Evil Laugh, prompting him to whack a ball right into Daffy's face.
- He Who Fights Monsters: Downplayed on the "Monsters" part. It's revealed when he was younger, he was tormented by a selfish, mean-spirited, and arrogant bully. Fast forward several years later and he developed all those qualities plus more. Also, what's his relationship with said bully now? The roles are reversed.
- Hidden Depths:
- "Beauty School" reveals Daffy is an extremely talented hairdresser. He effortlessly breezes through Tina's beauty school assignments, and legitimately earns a cosmetology license on his own merits.
- Following his training with the U.S. Marines, he proves to be an incredibly competent soldier. By the time he and Bugs reunite, it's implied that Daffy has been on multiple missions to rescue prisoners of war from foreign countries, and has done a damn good job at it.
- A few of the later episodes, most notably Best Friends Redux, show he does genuinely value Porky's friendship, and he is willing to help him out for purely altruistic reasons on occasion.
- In "Shell Game", it is revealed that Daffy's old recliner was something he bought with his own money after working at That-a-Burger, and that he didn't give up working until he had enough money to afford it.
- Hilariously Abusive Childhood: He claims his parents filled the house with so much arguing that "no one could stand to live there", and doesn't remember anything before age fifteen, possibly having blocked it out.
- Hypocritical Humor: Frequent. When he preaches about something, he immediately demonstrates that he doesn't practice.
- Idiot Hero: The "hero" part is debatable, the "idiot" part is not.
- Inferiority Superiority Complex: His haughty demeanor hides the fact that he deep down has no confidence in himself and lives in his roommate's shadow. Tina even accurately guesses he's an "insecure little weirdo who lies about everything and probably cries himself to sleep". Daffy wasn't offended, in fact; he was impressed she could see through him so easily.Daffy: Wow. You're good.
- Informed Flaw: When listing all of Daffy's flaws, Bugs states that Daffy is "sexist" and also someone who makes fun of the elderly. This is rarely shown (in "Double Date", he says that "all women are crazy"), despite his many other flaws.
- Insane Troll Logic: Probably the incarnation of this character that best deserves his name, Daffy.
- Insecure Love Interest: He thinks Tina is insane for willingly being his girlfriend. Regarding Tina, this comes up from time to time. Notably, his hate mail for Tina is calling her insane for even dating him.
- Insufferable Imbecile: Because of Adaptational Dumbass, he is an idiot in this show, while also keeping his selfish Small Name, Big Ego.
- Intergenerational Friendship: Daffy, who's a grown man, is friends with Gossamer, who's nine years old.
- In Touch with His Feminine Side: He becomes this in this show; then again, he isn't really sure what "gender" is anyway.
- It's All About Me: His selfishness is usually played for laughs.
- Jerkass Ball: A few episodes such as "The Float" tend to make him even more mean-spirited than usual.
- Jerkass to One: A "Crueler to One" example. Daffy is a jerk to pretty much everyone, but Porky gets the worst of it. A good example of this is the ending of "The Float", where Daffy needs a kidney transplant and Bugs pays for the operation while Porky donates one of his kidneys, and Daffy showers Bugs with praise but shows Porky no gratitude (and makes Porky do all the work of fixing his parade float, even though Porky says he still feels weak after losing a kidney). Porky's too passive to stand up to Daffy (most of the time at least) and since Porky bullied Daffy in high school, Daffy likely takes extra pleasure in tormenting Porky as a form of revenge.
- Jerk with a Heart of Gold: A jerkish, dishonest, and selfish individual who can also be nice plus a decent friend when he wants to be. In season two, however, the "heart of gold" part increases while the "jerk" part decreases.
- Karmic Butt-Monkey: He is rarely a Karma Houdini, and usually gets his comeuppance (which is especially apparent in "Casa de Calma"). Ironically, he causes Cecil's Laser-Guided Karma in "Customer Service" via firing the turtle. Also, while this cartoon doesn't focus much on slapstick, Daffy is often the show's favorite target when it does.
- Kick the Dog: His treatment of Porky in the second half of season 1 (especially "The Float") was very badly received by a lot of viewers.
- Lack of Empathy: Whenever he's paired with Porky, he doesn't seem to care how much crap he pulls onto him.
- Large Ham: Probably the hammiest character in the show.
- Literal-Minded: In "Spread Those Wings and Fly", Daffy takes the title of a book (the title of the episode) as encouragement to take flying lessons, and Porky tries to correct him by saying that he takes the title too literally.Daffy: [to Porky] What are you talking about? He must have said the word "fly" about a hundred times in there. "Fly" means fly!
- The Load: For Bugs and Porky. He causes a lot of problems for them with his selfishness and stupidity.
- Lovable Rogue: He's a pretty divisive character because of Depending on the Writer. Some play him as a Heroic Comedic Sociopath, some as a deconstruction of that trope. He seems to have roughly equal (or at least, equally loud) groups of fans and detractors.
- Manchild: He acts extremely childish for his age. In "Father Figures", when he tells Bugs that he's joining the Father Figures program, he tells him that he's not the father figure, he's the one getting the father figure. Upon hearing this, Bugs admits that the latter makes more sense. Considering his terrible and lonely childhood, it makes sense why he's emotionally stunted.
- Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: He's the Feminine Boy to Tina's Masculine Girl. Lampshaded in "Year of the Duck", when Daffy tries to enter Tina in the Royal Oaks Glen Oaks Oakwood Oaks Country Club's beauty pageant to give ducks a better image for the public:Tina: I'm not the beauty pageant type.
Daffy: Oh, of course you are. You're constantly at the salon, you spend hours in front of the mirror, and you're always prancing around the house in a tiara.
Tina: That's you. - Money Dumb: He is shown to be terrible with managing money. Here are three noteworthy examples:
- In "Peel of Fortune", he (using Bugs' blueprints) invents the automatic carrot peeler and gains a similar stream of income as Bugs did. Unlike Bugs, he spends a lot of it on frivolous objects and actively seeks out expensive stuff. After the peelers are recalled for being flammable, everyone wants their money back. But he's already spent everything and would have lost Bugs' old house.
- In "The Float", he uses the money he scammed Porky out of for a yacht. Of course, instead of using the rest of the money on a sail, a radio, and life jackets, he buys two jacuzzis along with bed sheets, leading to him getting stranded in the middle of the ocean. He blames Porky for being short on cash.
- In "Here Comes the Pig", when he and Porky arrive at a gas station, he is given money by Porky for gas while the latter was using the restroom. Instead, Daffy wastes it on snacks, magazines, and a lottery ticket, leading to them being stranded in the middle of the desert. Once again, he blames Porky for not giving him enough money for gas.
- Mr. Imagination: Although the line between "daydream" and "reality" is considerably blurred from his point of view (he really thinks he's a wizard, for instance).
- Mythology Gag:
- His birthday is April 17 (Porky's Duck Hunt was released on April 17, 1937).
- His stint in the U.S. Marine Corps and his genuine competence at being a Marine harkens back to several WWII-era shorts, where he was depicted as a soldier able to singlehandedly thrash Nazis left and right through his sheer badassery.
- Narcissist: According to Bugs. He does display many of the traits that mark narcissism in reality.
- Never My Fault: He's quick to blame his mistakes on others.
- Nice Guy: He was actually friendly when he was younger, which was one of his most notable traits at the time.
- Odd Friendship: He's prone to form odd friendships with characters who don't have much in common with him, and also who rarely interacted with him outside of this show, like Foghorn, Granny, and Gossamer.Gossamer: I always have fun hanging out with you.
Daffy: Me too, kid. - Official Couple: He becomes Tina Russo's boyfriend in "Double Date".
- Out-of-Character Moment: His behaviour in "Father Figures" is really tame compared to the rest of the series. Also in this episode, he seems to be relatively good at tennis, which is odd since in the rest of the series, he is repeatedly shown to be Athletically Challenged.
- Pet the Dog: Sometimes in the first season ("Devil Dog", "Eligible Bachelors", "That's My Baby"), more frequently in the second season.
- The Pig-Pen: Implied. In "That's My Baby", he says that he "cares about the Earth" when Tina points out that he doesn't shower, is revealed to have never heard of toilet paper in "Peel of Fortune", and in "Bugs and Daffy Get a Job", he refers to Bugs brushing his teeth as a "little quirk" (keep in mind that Daffy is a Toothy Bird) in defense of his snoring.
- Schemer: He hatches (failure-prone) schemes to benefit himself in some way.
- Self-Deprecation: Daffy willingly admits he's a terrible person several times.
- Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: The aggressive Manly Man to Porky's shy Sensitive Guy. Downplayed, since Daffy is often effeminate or even Camp Straight in this show, making him the Sensitive Guy to Bugs' Manly Man.
- Serial Moocher: Daffy tends to act like a parasite to Bugs and Porky. He lives with Bugs without paying rent, often steals Bugs’ money, and treats Porky like a slave.
- Serious Business: Jobs, relationships, personal hygiene, and safety are for losers! Parade floats and bowling, now, those are Serious Business.
- Seven Deadly Sins: He demonstrates all seven of them throughout the show:
- Greed: He constantly steals other people's money and possessions.
- Envy: He shows jealousy of Bugs for picking up a beautiful actress in "Casa De Calma" and admits to being jealous of Bugs’ popularity in "To Bowl or Not to Bowl". In "Best Friends Redux", he also becomes very jealous of Rodney Rabbit because he thinks Bugs likes Rodney more than him.
- Wrath: In "Monster Talent", he encourages Gossamer to fight back against bullies, telling him that violence is always the answer. He also gets in a fistfight with Foghorn Leghorn in "The Foghorn Leghorn Story".
- Lust: In "Working Duck", a brief joke implies he looks at internet porn. Also, he spends all of "Casa De Calma" hitting on a beautiful actress, purely wanting her for her looks and not even bothering to remember her name.
- Pride: Daffy is egotistical about how smart, handsome, and talented he believes he is, despite the fact that he is none of these things.
- Sloth: He’s a Lazy Bum who doesn’t have a job, rarely exercises, and mooches off his friends.
- Gluttony: He eats a lot of food. He also entered a hot dog eating contest in "Mr. Wiener".
- Shipper on Deck: In "Here Comes the Pig", he initially ships Porky/Becky, and then Porky/Petunia. When Becky gets married to another guy, Daffy comes to the conclusion that the only soulmate for Porky must be a female pig. So he appears satisfied when Porky meets Petunia.
- Sitcom Character Archetypes: Stick, Goofball, and Bully.
- Small Name, Big Ego: Daffy isn't nearly as smart, good-looking, or talented as he thinks he is.
- Smug Snake: Proud, condescending, dishonest, nowhere as smart as he thinks he is, and a non-villainous example.
- Spotlight-Stealing Squad: He gets the most screen time of anyone in the show.
- Straw Loser: He pretty much exists to make Bugs (and everybody else) look better. The trope is lampshaded in his license acceptance speech, where he admits he has been placed in the world to make other people look better. That being said, however, he apparently has his own successful moments, such as being a licensed-cosmetologist, a former CEO and a former Marine, but most of these moments are not seen in the cartoon proper, except for the Marine one.
- Sweet Tooth: He not only eats sugary products, but insane amounts of powdered sugar that he apparently adds to his breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
- Talkative Loon: To the point of Daffy asking Bugs what the heck he was talking about after delivering a particularly outlandish monologue in "Working Duck". (Bugs, of course, had no idea.)
- Token Evil Teammate: Particularly in Season 1. Daffy's friends all generally act nice, while Daffy is rude, arrogant, ungrateful, jealousy-prone, and shamelessly selfish, and often commits crimes, such as stealing. Daffy also acts downright villainous in "Peel of Fortune" and "The Float", even doing an Evil Laugh in the former. This becomes downplayed in Season 2, where he gets nicer.
- Took a Level in Jerkass: In the first half of season one, he has Pet the Dog moments and you can feel sorry for him at times. In the second half he becomes a borderline sociopath, his lowest point being "The Float."
- Took a Level in Kindness: Starting in season two. While he still does have his occasional Jerkass moments throughout the season, Daffy became a much nicer person than he was in season one.
- In the second season premiere, he realized that winning isn't everything after becoming a coach to Gossamer and his friends and was happy that his kids were having fun.
- In "Here Comes the Pig", he was even willing to help Porky win back his third grade girlfriend after all these years, before she gets married.
- Trauma-Induced Amnesia: Implied. He doesn't remember anything of his early childhood before he was 15, and what we do know of his childhood paints a pretty grim picture, so it's probably a good thing he doesn't remember.
- Turn the Other Cheek: He's usually on the receiving end of this, despite being a Card-Carrying Jerkass.
- He bankrupted Foghorn's company after inheriting it from him, and later demolished the movie Foghorn was making about his life, to the point where they came to blows over the latter (both of which Carol points out to Foghorn when she advises against adopting him in "Father Figures"), not to mention sent him a hate mail that insults him. Despite this, Foghorn keeps roping Daffy into his adventures and they remain on good terms.
- Despite his horrendous treatment of and behavior towards Porky (particularly in "The Float" and "The Muh-Muh-Muh-Murder"), the latter still continues treating him like a good friend.
- The Unapologetic: He almost never apologizes for his misdeeds, sometimes claiming that he is the one who is owed the apology.
- Ungrateful Bastard: It's rare for him to show gratitude, even claiming never he thanked anyone before "French Fries."
- Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist: He deserves all of the stuff that happens to him because of his jerkish behavior.
- Used to Be a Sweet Kid: When attending Daffy's high school reunion, Bugs discovers that Daffy was a friendly, if awkward and nerdy, teenager who was bullied and humiliated by Jerk Jock Porky Pig. Porky Took a Level in Kindness after graduation, while Daffy took all of the levels in jerkass. Daffy's long list of issues are implied to be a result of all the mistreatment he endured as a kid.
- Walking Disaster Area: It's a rare day when one of his hijinks doesn't end in an explosion or someone (usually him, at the very least) getting hurt. One of his attempts to celebrate the 4th of July ended with the entire neighborhood being set on fire.
- We Want Our Jerk Back!: In "Besties", the series' first episode, Bugs gets upset with Daffy when they lose on Besties, a game show about best friends and how much they know each other due to how little Daffy knows about him despite the fact that Bugs knows everything about him. When Speedy tells Daffy that he needs to be a better friend to Bugs, Daffy takes Speedy's advice to heart and becomes a Stalker Without a Crush to Bugs. Bugs tells Daffy to stop trying so hard and that he liked him better when he knew nothing about him.
- With Friends Like These...: Daffy was this with pretty much any protagonist due to his sefishness, overambitiousness, or just out-and-out screwiness in the original theatrical shorts, but he really falls into this territory in this series. One of his most infamous acts is in "The Float", where he lies to Porky about needing money for a kidney transplant, then uses Porky's entire life savings to buy a yacht to replace his parade float after it gets destroyed at the car wash.note He also does little else but sponge off Bugs and act like a nuisance to the whole neighborhood.
Other Major Characters

Porky Pig is one of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's friends. Despite being extremely bright and bookish, Porky has an innocent, naive quality that Daffy frequently uses to his advantage, tricking Porky into parting with large sums of money or involving him in bizarre schemes.
- Accidental Misnaming: Speedy usually calls him "Pinky", actually thinking that's his name despite everyone else calling him Porky out loud.
- Ambiguously Bi: In "Double Date", he is excited when Daffy invites him on a date and even waits for Daffy with a bouquet of flowers. Regardless, he ends up attracting many women and ends up dating Petunia.
- The Atoner: Despite viewing high school as his Glory Days, he heavily regrets bullying Daffy, and wants to be friends with him in present day. Unfortunately for him, Daffy has become the exact same jerk that Porky used to be to him.
- Beware the Nice Ones: He's usually an Extreme Doormat to everybody (Daffy's just the one who exploits it most). But in the notorious "The Float", after Daffy tricks Porky into giving him all of his money by claiming that he needs a kidney transplant — and then uses the money to buy a yacht — an enraged Porky beats the ever-living crap out of him upon finding out that he was tricked.
- Big Jerk on Campus: He was this in high school, a Jerk Jock and Chick Magnet who bullied Daffy.
- The Bore: One of the reasons why he's the No-Respect Guy is that the others find him and his interests really boring:Porky: W-well, the textile museum doesn't open until noon. B-but that doesn't mean we can't have f-fun right here and now.
Henery Hawk: By staring at a wall?
Porky: It's a f-freshly painted wall. You see, right now, the p-paint is wet. Soon, it'll be l-less wet. And if we're lucky, we'll be here the-the moment it's no longer wet at all or d-dry.
Henery Hawk: That's the most boring thing in the world! That's why there's an expression "Watching paint dry." We're literally doing the expression! - Brainy Pig: One of the smartest characters in the show, though he is rather naive.
- Bully Turned Buddy: He used to bully Daffy in high school, but they are on friendlier terms as adults.
- Butt-Monkey: Whenever somebody has to lose big, it turns out to be Porky.
- Character Exaggeration: Wasn't that much of a doormat in the original shorts, where he actually fights back at Daffy much more often. In this show, he lets everyone walk all over him. It's not really called attention to, but his Extreme Doormat tendencies in this show may be connected to the fact that he's a Reformed Bully; in high school he was a Jerk Jock who went out of his way to bully Daffy.
- Chick Magnet: This is the rare case where the Butt-Monkey is one. He has attracted more girls than Bugs and Daffy combined, shown in "High School Reunion" and a few Merrie Melodies. After Petunia Pig makes her appearance, this trope is downplayed.
- Composite Character: While he stutters and doesn't wear pants like Porky, his shy, naive pushover personality is closer to Hamton J. Pig from Tiny Toon Adventures (another Looney Tunes adaptation of the 90s).
- A Degree in Useless: He has a degree in medieval poetry, with a minor in medieval architecture.
- Ditzy Genius: He is one of the most Book Smart characters, but is also very naive, often blindly trusting Daffy. He is also occasionally shown to be Sarcasm-Blind, like in "Father Figures", where he consistently fails to pick up on Henery's obvious sarcasm.
- Earn Your Happy Ending: Porky is constantly abused throughout the series and shown to have crippling loneliness. Only after Petunia made her overdue debut did things turn around for him.
- Extreme Doormat: To Daffy, who does not give him a shred of dignity or respect. Yet Porky still treats him kindly and often goes out of his way to appease him.
- Foil: To Daffy, particularly when it comes to their Butt-Monkey nature. Porky’s stable, kindhearted and levelheaded, but he often loses big: his job, his car, his dignity, his money, and even his home. He’s also rather passive, letting others do things for him, and rarely having a backbone for himself. Daffy is a major Jerkass, particularly to Porky, is more unstable and insane, often goes from one job to the next only to lose it by the end of the episode, but is more willing to confront his problems compared to Porky.
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Melancholic/Phlegmatic.
- The Friend Nobody Likes: His closest friends are Daffy, Bugs, and Speedy. Daffy constantly belittles, humiliates, and takes advantage of him, Bugs often finds him annoying ("That’s My Baby", "Semper Lie", "Mrs. Porkbunny's", "Gossamer is Awesomer"), and even Speedy is dismissive of him at times.
- Future Loser: He was the most popular student in high school, but peaked too early.
- Geek: If the song "Table for One" is any indication, Porky is a fan of Dungeons & Dragons, comic books, action figures, and Harry Potter.
- Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal: He wears a jacket and tie, but no pants. Lampshaded in "We're in Big Truffle" when Daffy asks him what he plans on doing with his half of the money that they're going to recieve from selling the truffle:Porky: I g-g-g-guess I could buy a shirt. I mean, I n-n-n-never felt like I n-n-n-needed a shirt, considering I already had a j-j-j-jacket and tie... It seems so extravagant.
Daffy: THAT'S why you don't wear a shirt? Because you're CHEAP?!
Porky: Well, w-w-w-why don't YOU wear clothes?
Daffy: Because I love my body. - Hidden Depths: He actually has all sorts of skills and beneficiaries as Daffy discovers. It's just Daffy usually cares too little about him to find out anything. There's also the occasional hint that he may not be quite as genuinely nice as he appears (though still a good guy).
- He is a certified accountant (though he despises and ends up getting fired from that job).
- He switches careers to being a caterer, and turns out to be very successful at it... until he inexplicably runs out of business.
- He is also a city councilman, and is very knowledgeable on matters of government bureaucracy, civil infrastructure, and political science.
- I Ate WHAT?!: He loved eating pepperoni, until he found out it was primarily a pork product.
- I Just Want to Have Friends: His main motivation.
- Impoverished Patrician: Subverted. His family seemingly used to be very wealthy, but Porky now lives extremely modestly and doesn't have much money.
- Incredibly Lame Fun: He thinks it’s fun to do things that other people think are no fun at all, like buying ink for his printer, or literally watching paint dry.
- Jerk Jock: Hard to believe, but he was this in high school. He grew out of it. It seems this universe turned him into its Butt-Monkey as karma.
- Karmic Butt-Monkey: He is one of the factors that helped create the jerkass Daffy Duck that we know in the series, and nowadays he is the main victim of his cruel behavior, while Daffy is mainly just rude to others at worst. It is implied that the reason Porky accepts all this abuse is not just because he is lonely but also as a way to get Daffy to forgive him (which doesn't work).
- Laser-Guided Karma: He used to bully Daffy viciously when they were teenagers. So how Daffy treats him as an adult is surprisingly enough somewhat deserved.
- Love at First Sight: He immediately falls for Petunia when he sees her for the first time at a wedding.
- Money Dumb: In "That’s My Baby", Porky keeps getting conned into wasting his money on stuff he doesn’t need or want. For example, a waitress at a restaurant talks him into ordering spinach-artichoke poppers, and then he remembers he doesn’t even like spinach, or artichokes. Then, after learning how to say no to upsells, he turns down a great deal on car insurance because he mistook it for another upsell.
- Neat Freak: His reorganization of Bugs's house in "Gossamer is Awesomer" drives Bugs round the bend.
- Nice Guy: Along with Bugs, Porky is one of the nicest characters in the series.
- No-Respect Guy: If he appears in an episode at all, it's so that more lack-of-respect can be loaded on him.
- Not So Above It All: Despite typically being the more intelligent one of the duo, it's Daffy who has to spell it out to him that pepperoni, which he eats in lieu of sausage as he knows the latter contains pork, also contains pork. When he finds out, he's downright horrified.
- Obsessively Organized: In one episode, Porky has to stay with Bugs for a while, and while he's helpful at first, he starts reorganizing his entire kitchen to the point of alphabetizing his goods and moving plates and silverware around. He even makes sure all the identical soup cans face label outward when Bugs puts one back irregularly.
- Official Couple: He becomes a couple with Petunia Pig as of "Mr. Wiener".
- Only Sane Man: Along with Bugs. Even though he is an Extreme Doormat, he's one of the more rational characters.
- The Pollyanna: He tries hard to keep looking on the bright side.
- Porky Pig Pronunciation: Of course, except he doesn't compensate by changing words like the original shorts or other shows.
- Properly Paranoid: Throughout the B-plot of "The Black Widow", Porky worries about the various fire hazards (his iron, stove, curling iron, and antique magnifying glass) he might have left on when Daffy talks him into going with him to Mexico on his Spring Break. At the end of the episode, every single one of these things go off, causing Porky's house to catch fire.
- Reformed Bully: It's revealed that he was a bully to Daffy Duck back in high school, which may explain why Daffy treats him badly. Now he's the nicest character on the show and apparently apologized to Daffy a thousand times for what he did in the past. Then again, he does look back on his bullying days with fondness...
- Rejected Apology: He apparently apologized about a thousand times to Daffy for bullying him in high school, but Daffy continues to treat him poorly.
- Sanity Slippage: To varying degrees, especially in "Bugs & Daffy Get a Job".
- Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: The Sensitive Guy to Bugs and Daffy's Manly Men.
- Sitcom Character Archetypes: Square, Dork and Goofball.
- Speech Impediment: He always stutters when he talks.
- Straw Loser: Not as much as Daffy, but still ends up the Butt-Monkey of many situations he lands himself in. There's an exception Played for Laughs in one of the Merrie Melodies shorts, but in the main continuity he always ends up losing, no matter how earnestly hard he tries.
- Supreme Chef: After getting fired as an accountant, Porky becomes a caterer, and turns out to be very skilled and successful at it. Bugs even ends up addicted to his food and attempts to hog his services all to himself. Henery also ends up enjoying his roast chicken and asks if he could teach him how to prepare it.
- Wide-Eyed Idealist: He tends to look up the positive side, even if there's a bad situation.

Speedy Gonzales is an extremely fast mouse who lives with Bugs and Daffy as their "mouse in the wall" and runs a pizza parlor called Pizzarriba.
- The Ace: More so than Bugs, as unlike him, he is still very unflawed.
- Adaptational Jerkass: He's much more openly rude and impatient with others than he is in the original cartoons.
- Badass Adorable: "El Queso Bandito" paints him as a fleet-footed Robin Hood since birth, and "Devil Dog" shows him taming the Nightmare Fuel laced Tazmanian Devil without batting an eyelash.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: Wears no shoes.
- Brutal Honesty: To the point he can be a bit rude.Daffy: Hey, Speedy, Porky's finally got a girlfriend.
Speedy: Ooh! Good for you, Pinky. I thought you were going to be one those always lives alone guys, who just gets more and more desperate until he alienates the few friends that he has and then he's just alone. So what a relief for you. Now when can we meet this new girlfriend?
Porky: [stammering] I don't have a girlfriend.
Speedy: Well, stay in the game, Pinky. But maybe you should think about growing a beard. You got so much face. - Comically Missing the Point: In DMV, Bugs calls Speedy and asks if he drives a car. Speedy shows up in his car, that is built for someone his size and is too small for Bugs. He points out that Bugs didn't say anything about whether or not Speedy can actually give him a lift.
- Competition Freak: Has a strong competitive nature which he showed In "The Grand Old Duck Of York" when a new restaurant moved in across the street from his. He claims being competitive is how he became the fastest mouse in Mexico.
- The Conscience: He is occasionally shown to act as Daffy's conscience.
- Depending on the Writer: While he always has his Brutal Honesty, he can be both friendly and rude to his friends (mostly Daffy or Porky), depending on the episode. For example, in some episodes, he's helpful and willing to help Daffy when he's in trouble ("The Stud, the Nerd, the Average Joe, and the Saint", "The Black Widow"), but in other episodes he hates Daffy and even wants him dead without provocation ("Mr. Wiener").
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Sanguine.
- Friendship Denial: In the first episode, he tells Daffy that he’s not his friend.
- Funny Foreigner: Sometimes speaks in Gratuitous Spanish.
- I Am Not Weasel: He has been mistaken for other types of rodents, particularly a rat and a gopher. He will correct that he's a mouse.
- Invincible Hero: He is right about almost everything, owns a cool car, teaches flamenco dancing, gets the girls, saves a restaurant started by Bugs and Daffy that eventually is given to him, and trains Taz to obey him in seconds!
- Jerkass to One:
- Downplayed, but he tends to come off as rather dismissive of Porky, to the point of getting his name wrong even when others say it out loud, even thinking "Pinky" is his name. Case in point, one episode begins with Porky desperately looking for someone to hang out with. Bugs and Daffy are busy with their girlfriends, but Speedy tells him he has no girlfriend or plans. When Porky asks enthusiastically if he wants to hang out, Speedy nonchalantly says "not really" and just walks off. Another episode has him repeatedly tease Porky for not having a girlfriend.
- He's also excited at the idea of Daffy dying in "Mr. Weiner", but this is more justified since Daffy is a jerk who deserves to be The Friend Nobody Likes.
- Light Is Good: Lampshaded in Itsy Bitsy Gopher, where Lola and Daffy think his suit symbolizes his "purity".
- Morality Chain: He is the one who calls Daffy out for his poor treatment of Bugs and convinces him to be a better friend. In Season 2, he also acts as one to Bugs, calling him out for the few times Bugs indulges in antics.
- Only Sane Man: He lacks any Fatal Flaw and fills this role towards Bugs and Porky when they fail to do so or are engaged in questionable behavior themselves.
- Super-Speed: It's severely toned down in this series, but he can still move at incredibly fast speeds.
- Token Minority: He's a Mexican mouse.
- Vocal Evolution: His voice is significantly lower than Mel Blanc's version.

Lola Bunny is Bugs' scatter-brained, bubbly, obsessive girlfriend, who has a habit of speaking rapidly, whether anyone else is listening or not.
- Abhorrent Admirer: Before becoming an Official Couple, Bugs finds her habit of talking too much annoying and embarrassing enough to try and create excuses to break up with her. It's only after they spend a romantic day in Paris where she doesn't talk that he comes around to her.
- Adaptational Comic Relief: She isn't very comical in Space Jam but she was intentionally changed for this adaption so to appear more "looney tuney" like the other characters.
- Adaptational Curves: Inverted. She had a tall, curvaceous, humanoid figure in Space Jam, but is depicted as considerably shorter, skinnier, and more cartoony here.
- Adaptational Dumbass: In Space Jam, although she doesn't get many lines, she seems reasonably intelligent. In Baby Looney Tunes she's the smartest of the babies. Here she's a Dumb Blonde and Upper-Class Twit.
- Adaptational Modesty: A mild example. In Space Jam, she wore a crop top and very short shorts. While her outfits in the show tend to leave her arms and legs exposed, they are definitely more modest.
- Adaptational Wimp: She is portrayed as a badass You Go, Girl! in Space Jam. Even in Baby Looney Tunes she's good at sports. Here she's a klutz who is unable to play tennis, although she does have a Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass moment where she braved a dangerous Mayan pyramid to get Bugs an anniversary gift.
- Adaptation Personality Change: Her original character in Space Jam is simply a Flat Character who was there to be an attractive basketball player and exaggerated sex symbol who Bugs is head over heels in love with. Here, Lola is an energetic Cloudcuckoolander who's excruciatingly infatuated with him (although Bugs would later genuinely love her in return once they became an Official Couple).
- All Girls Want Bad Boys: In "Members Only", Bugs tries to get Lola to break up with him by dressing up as a woman and pretending to be an ex-girlfriend warning her to break up with him now or have her heart broken. Lola thinks that Bugs is a bad boy, which makes her want him even more. Later, in "Rebel Without A Glove", when Bugs temporarily becomes a "bad boy", she was once again excited by the idea.
- Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!: Even moreso than Daffy. Even a short sentence could suddenly turn into an extended detour about a random subject.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: As with most of the cast. Though she does wear shoes at times.
- Bare Midriffs Are Feminine: She has a feminine personality and wears some midriff-baring outfits throughout the show.
- In "Rebel Without A Glove", she wears a crop top made of coins in her biker girl outfit.
- In the song, "I Love to Sing-A”, she wears a crop top while skating.
- In "The Black Widow", she wears a bikini while getting tanned.
- In "It's A Handbag", she briefly dons a Bedlah Babe outfit while searching for Bugs' anniversary gift (as she was in the desert at the time).
- Brainless Beauty: While not seductive like she is in Space Jam, she's still a beautiful lady... and a total airhead.
- Butt-Monkey: She's probably the female character most subjected to physical comedy on the show. Her very first scene has her badly playing tennis, and getting bonked over the head by a ball when she gets distracted by Bugs. In "Muh-Muh-Muh Murder" she breaks her leg. And in "Father Figures", she slips on a tennis-ball and falls on the ground.
- Characterization Marches On: The darker aspects of her character (namely her Yandere and Stalker with a Crush tendencies) are absent in season 2.
- Cloudcuckoolander: Daffy's better at it, but only because Lola can't pay attention to any one thing long enough to build a delusion around it.
- Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Fights off a squad of undead skeletons and a giant robot so she can find an anniversary present for Bugs.
- Cute and Psycho: Has shades of this in early episodes, but later grows out of her stalker/yandere tendencies and is portrayed more as a harmless Cloudcuckoolander.
- Cute Clumsy Girl: There's a lot of pratfalling and slapstick when she's around.
- Distaff Counterpart: Despite being Bugs' girlfriend, she is similar to Daffy, without the Jerkass traits.
- The Ditherer: She's unable to settle on a decision, even for something as simple as what she wants to drink. Or if she likes a certain part in a movie the most. ("Oh! Oh! This is the best part. Oh, no. Wait. This is the worst part. Oh, I hate this part.")
- The Ditz: Lola can out-ditz anyone on the show.Lola: Are you really a duck? I always thought you were a crow. Aren't ducks the ones with those big beaver teeth and that big beaver tail?
Daffy: Those are beavers.
Lola: So, you're a beaver?
Daffy: Uh... Forget it.- Later, in the same episode:Lola: Porky's a pig? I always thought he was a seal.
- Later, in the same episode:
- Drives Like Crazy: As shown in "DMV". Yosemite Sam being unfortunate enough to see what is going on when she is driving causes him to freeze up from shock, and then faint.
- Dumbass Has a Point: Lola convincing Daffy in "Daffy Duck Esquire" that he can't avoid Tina's dad forever if he ever wants to marry her. It's actually one of the rare moments in the series where she doesn't say anything loony at all.
- Dumb Blonde: She has blonde hair on top of her head and she's not too bright.
- Ears as Hair: Her ears are tied behind her head like a ponytail. Lampshaded in "Members Only".Bugs: I like your hair.
Lola: Thanks! ...They're my ears. - Foil: While her personality is a bit of a Distaff Counterpart to Daffy, her main differences is that she's generally a nice person while Daffy has apathy towards almost everyone. At worst, she just comes across as Innocently Insensitive.
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Sanguine/Choleric.
- Furry Female Mane: Has a tuft of blonde hair on the top of her head.
- Generation Xerox: Lola and her father are both airheaded, but kind, people who love Bugs to the point of obsession. They also both love playing tennis, but are really bad at it.
- Genius Ditz: In "We're In Big Truffle", she makes a passing remark that she babysat as a way to pay for medical school.
- Genki Girl: She's an energetic Cloudcuckoolander with a Motor Mouth.
- Girliness Upgrade: Not that she didn't have any girliness in her first appearance, but here, she is a rich air-headed Valley Girl instead of a Passionate Sports Girl.
- Glurge Addict: In her initial appearance in "Members Only", she seems to be a fan of feel-good movies, even though she was only reacting to the trailer. Later, during the "We Are In Love" song number, she's shown to have two Margaret Keane-style paintings.
- Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Lola appears to have golden-ish fur with blonde bangs on the top of her head, but she is very sweet and kindhearted (although she can be a Dumb Blonde).
- Heterosexual Life-Partners: Becomes this with Tina.
- Hidden Depths: Apparently, Lola is in medical school.
- Horny Hare: Lola Bunny acts very flirtatious and lovestruck towards Bugs. In "Members Only", Lola even says she wants to have a lot of babies with him.
- Hypocritical Humor: The entire segment in "Double Date" where Lola attempts to talk Daffy out of dating Tina.Lola: Not every girl's as stable as me. [flattens a soda can against her forehead with a creepy look on her face]
- Kindhearted Simpleton: Lola is a very sweet person and usually means well, although she can be quite dense.
- Living Emotional Crutch: To Bugs. When he mistakenly believes that she broke up with him in "Dear John", he is so distraught that he decides to travel the world by boating, stating, "There's nothing here for me anymore".
- Loon with a Heart of Gold: She may be a Talkative Loon but her intentions are genuinely good.
- Love Makes You Crazy: Not that she wasn't already crazy...
- Mad Love: At her worst. Hell, she even stars in a Merrie Melody called "We Are In Love" that's built off of this trope.
- Mirror Character: To Daffy. Both are dimwitted, insanely obsessive, and prone to Insane Troll Logic and Comically Missing the Point, other than being both close to Bugs. But while Daffy is negative, rude, and he dislikes most people around him, Lola is happy, friendly, and she likes most people around her.
- Mood-Swinger: She has the tendency to have little control over her emotions; one moment she's crying her eyes out and the next she's laughing her ass off. Just watch the movie scene in "Members Only".
- Morality Pet: She's one of the few people Daffy respects, and she manages to get along with him.
- Motor Mouth: She talks a mile-a-minute, and Bugs is easily annoyed by this.
- Nice Girl: When she's not being a Yandere. If you can get over all her insanity, she is a very friendly person.
- Not Good with Rejection: So much so that she ends up breaking down into tears when Bugs actually rejects her in one episode.
- Official Couple: She's a couple with Bugs Bunny as of "Double Date".
- Orange/Blue Contrast: Her fur is an orange-ish shade and, in season 2, she wears a blue dress.
- Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl: The Energetic Girl to Bugs' Savvy Guy.
- Serial Romeo: In early episodes, she easily falls for different guys (Bugs, Daffy, Pepe), but eventually evolves into a stable, if eccentric, girlfriend to Bugs.
- Sitcom Character Archetypes: Goofball and Bigmouth.
- Spoiled Sweet: Zigzagged. Lola's parents are rich, spoil her, and are incredibly nice, if quirky, people. In turn, Lola also turned out nice, but their spoiling parenting didn't account for Lola's craziness, which resulted in her becoming a Stalker with a Crush.
- Stalker with a Crush: The Merrie Melody song, "We Are In Love", is basically "Stalker with a Crush: The Song". Among other tendencies of this trope, Lola stands outside Bugs' house in the rain while sporting a Slasher Smile. However, this trope is now averted now that Lola and Bugs became an Official Couple starting in "Double Date".
- Stronger Than They Look: Lola has a rather petite figure, but she's rather physically strong. She has the strength to throw herself a couple stories up a building by swinging on telephone lines, climb up the sides of buildings without breaking a sweat, pry open closed elevator doors with just her bare hands, and crush a soda can against her forehead without flinching.
- Strong Family Resemblance: Lola looks exactly like her mom, except that her mom is overweight and her ears are styled into a bun instead of a ponytail.
- Talkative Loon: Rather unhinged and talks a lot, though because she is an airhead she tends to lose track of what she is talking about or what she is doing, quick to change topics or switch her attention to something else.
- Tomboy and Girly Girl: The more Girly Girl to Tina's Tomboy.
- Tomboyish Ponytail: She certainly isn't a tomboy, but she wears a purple (light blue in the second season) rubber band on both ears like a high ponytail.
- Took a Level in Badass: Best shown in "It's a Handbag".
- Town Girls: The Femme to Tina’s Butch and Petunia’s Neither. She’s a ditzy, obsessively romantic, rich girl.
- Upper-Class Twit: She's an empty-head, but apparently, she and her family are wealthy.
- Vocal Dissonance: Unlike most characters similar to her, who normally have a high-pitched or Simpleton Voice, Lola sounds like a normal woman would sound in real life, and her voice is not cartoonish. Which makes all the silly and nonsensical things she says even funnier.
- Women Are Wiser: Averted. Bugs is clearly the more intelligent, sensible, and grounded person in their relationship.
- Yandere: At her worst. Just see "We Are In Love" if you really wanna know what we mean.

A new character original to the show, Tina Russo is a female duck who is Daffy's girlfriend. She works at a copy store called "Copy Place". Tina is another straight character of the show, with a no-nonsense personality.
- The Ace: Tina can do just about anything, except cut hair.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: Doesn't wear shoes, but is otherwise fully clothed. She'll wear shoes on occasion.
- Brainy Brunette: Tina is sensible, street smart, a Junior Manager at her job and she can understand a guy like Daffy! She is a brunette in opposition to Lola who is a Dumb Blonde to the nth degree.
- Brutal Honesty: See practically anything she ever says to Daffy.
- Canon Foreigner: A new character created for this show, replacing Daffy's former girlfriend Melissa Duck.
- Daddy's Girl: She has a loving relationship with her dad. She was shown to worry about her father's possible disapproval of Daffy, proving that while she doesn't care what others think about her she does care about her family's opinion.
- Deadpan Snarker: The biggest one in the show after Bugs.
- Distaff Counterpart: To Bugs. The serious Straight Man to her Cloudcuckoolander love interest complete with exaggerated accent, much like Bugs is this to Lola.
- Foil:
- To Lola. While Lola is a dizty girly girl, Tina is a serious-minded, sarcastic and cynical tomboy.
- Similar to Lola to Daffy, she is a bit of a Distaff Counterpart to Bugs, being more serious and down to earth. Compared to Bugs, she's more direct than Bugs' sarcastic remarks and is not as prideful.
- Four-Temperament Ensemble: The Phlegmatic.
- Freudian Excuse: Played with. She seems to have a very happy family life but her stressful job and struggle finding a successful path in life seems to be the reason why she can be so cynical and snarky.
- Hair-Trigger Temper: She has a short temper, especially in season 2 where she can get easily pissed off by her boss or by her customers. It's a plot point in "Customer Service".
- Heterosexual Life-Partners: Becomes this with Lola.
- Hidden Depths: She's quite knowledgeable in home hardware and handy work. This makes sense as she is close to her dad who seems like a very traditional family man.
- I Can Change My Beloved: Her reason for being with Daffy, since she "likes a project".Tina: You're like an abandoned building that ought to be condemned. You know, with busted windows, rats running around, a real nasty sewage situation. But maybe if the right person got a hold of it and cleaned it up, maybe they could take that disgusting building and turn it into something not so disgusting.
- Joisey: Speaks with a heavy New Jersey/Italian American accent, as befits her surname.
- Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: Masculine Girl to Daffy's Feminine Boy. Emphasized by this exchange:Tina: I'm not the beauty pageant type.
Daffy: Oh, of course you are. You're constantly at the salon, you spend hours in front of the mirror, and you're always prancing around the house in a tiara.
Tina: That's you. - Morality Pet: For Daffy. He once put on a whole lie to prove to her father he was successful, not for the sake of his ego, but because he was afraid of losing her.
- Ms. Vice Girl: As sarcastic, cynical, and even uptight as Tina can be, she is a good-hearted, considerate, caring, grounded, and reasonable person.
- Non-Mammalian Hair: She has brown hair which appears to be streaked or highlighted.
- Non-Mammal Mammaries: Prominently sports them. Hilariously, when Daffy disguises himself as Tina in "Beauty School", his only distinction from her is his lack thereof.
- Odd Name Out: For some reason, she and her family are the only animal characters who avert Species Surname. Her surname is Russo, not Duck, and she mentions in one episode that her mother's maiden name is Romano.
- Official Couple: She starts to date Daffy Duck as of "Double Date".
- Only Sane Woman: One of the most down-to-earth characters in the show, along with Bugs.
- Rambunctious Italian: Averted, as she is very calm and doesn't really get mad and scream at people when triggered.
- Straight Man: She's remarkably good at remaining calm in the face of Daffy's antics.
- Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Of Melissa Duck. Melissa was supposed to appear in the show as Daffy's girlfriend but Warner Bros. was concerned that fans wouldn't remember Melissa so Tina was created in her place.
- Tomboy and Girly Girl: The Tomboy to Lola's Girly Girl.
- Took a Level in Jerkass: Downplayed. She has always stayed as a good-hearted, reasonable person (especially compared to her boyfriend), but she becomes slightly more aggressive and short-tempered in season 2. Thankfully, she never became a full on jerk.
- Town Girls: The Butch to Lola’s Femme and Petunia’s Neither. She’s tough, snarky, and not into girly things.
- Unkempt Beauty: She likes to dress simple, and while she does on occasion dress up, she doesn't like wearing excessive makeup as shown in "Year of the Duck", proving further that she does not care about appearances. Even then, she's still attractive enough to garner Daffy's affections in her debut episode.
- We Want Our Jerk Back!: In the B-plot of "Customer Service", Tina's manager suspends her from Copy Place when he catches her being rude to the customers, so Tina enlists Lola's help in being more positive and upbeat so he can lift her suspension. Near the end of the episode, when Tina's manager tries unsuccessfully to tell Yosemite Sam that he can't photocopy money, he is relieved to see Tina return, and lifts her suspension so she can deal with customers like Sam. When Tina tells him she doesn't think she can be positive and upbeat, he tells her that right now, he needs a rude and mean-spirited employee, admitting that she was right when she said he had no idea how to deal with the customers.
- What Does She See in Him?: Even Daffy himself believes she's insane for loving him.
- Women Are Wiser: At least compared to her boyfriend Daffy Duck. Not that Daffy set much ground work anyway.
Neighbors and Pets

In this show, the Tasmanian Devil is portrayed as walking on four legs like a real Tasmanian Devil and his eyes are bloodshot red (later turned yellow when Bugs uses a taming trick that Speedy Gonzales taught him).
- Adaptational Heroism: Goes from an antagonist to a pet.
- Adaptational Nonsapience: In the original cartoons, he's as anthromorphic as the other animals in the shorts (if slightly dumber and more violent). Here, he's portrayed as an actual Tasmanian Devil and for that as a non-sapient animal.
- Affectionate Nickname: Even after finding out he's a Tasmanian Devil, Bugs still affectionately calls him "Poochie". Everyone else refers to him as "Taz", including himself.
- Because You Were Nice to Me: While everyone and everything else reacts to Taz's introduction with well-justified terror, Bugs immediately assumes that he's a dog and dotes on him accordingly. As a result, Bugs is the only character Taz is automatically nice to—and one of the few he doesn’t try to murder.
- A Day in the Limelight: Gets to be in the spotlight in two episodes: "Devil Dog," which is his introduction episode, and "Ridiculous Journey," which focuses on him, Sylvester and Tweety.
- Extreme Omnivore: Has the universal constant of wanting to eat anything he can get his hands on.
- Hellish Pupils: He had vertical slits for pupils prior to his domestication.
- Horrifying the Horror: Even he, a fearsome Tasmanian devil, is terrified of spiders, particularly the deadly African sand spider.
- Incorrect Animal Noise: When he was still savage, Taz makes roaring noises like a tiger. After his domestication, he goes back to his trademark yelling noises (which sound like a real Tasmanian Devil).
- Informed Species: Real Tasmanian devils are about the size of cats and have black fur and pointed noses, none of which apply to Taz.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: Until Speedy domesticates him, after which he has Yellow Eyes of Sneakiness.
- Running on All Fours: In this incarnation, Taz runs on all fours like a real Tasmanian Devil, save for a few exceptions like in "Ridiculous Journey".
- Team Pet: After he was adopted by Bugs.
- Volatile Tasmanian Devil: He starts off as a savage beast attacking anyone he perceives as prey. Even after being domesticated by Bugs, he is still prone to causing havoc.

Yosemite Sam is one of Bugs and Daffy's neighbors. He is a liar, a thief, and a cheat, amongst other things. He tends to annoy Bugs and Daffy.
- Adaptational Heroism: He's overall nicer than in the original shorts. Partially justified because he's no longer allowed to use his trademark pistols (which is revealed in "The Stud, the Nerd, the Average Joe, and the Saint" to be the result of a court order), so he can't intimidate and bully people as easily as before. He's still loud, rude and thoughtless most of the time, but when it occurs to him to be nice, he's pretty decent.
- Fiery Redhead: He still has his temper, though he's not an Evil Redhead like in the original shorts.
- Freudian Excuse: In "Gribbler's Quest", we learn in his therapy group that Sam has anger issues because he was bullied by other kids in his childhood. In fact, he is the one who suggests Daffy to go with him to therapy class.
- Hair-Trigger Temper: He even has his own song about his temper.
- Hidden Depths:
- In "The Grand Old Duck of York" he deduces that Daffy is attempting to play The Grand Duke of York.
- In "You've Got Hate Mail," when changing back into his usual self, he unloads a long rant about how awful a book's protagonist is, complaining about how there's no arc to the character and there was no emotional journey.
- Honor Before Reason: Yosemite Sam has a rather bizarre code of honor, always trying to return favors to people who help himnote . He even goes so far as to try to save Bugs' life when the latter saves him from a house fire, spending the entire episode tailing him and looking for danger to save him from, much to Bugs' annoyance.
- Insufferable Imbecile: One of the most idiotic characters and also one of the most aggresive. His stupidity can irritate Bugs just as much as the one of Daffy and Lola. See all his interactions with Bugs in "The Stud, the Nerd, the Average Joe, and the Saint".
- Jerkass Has a Point:
- In "The Foghorn Leghorn Story", Sam brings up some very good points in the questions he asks Mac and Tosh about the titular film based around Foghorn's life story, namely why a duck (Daffy) is cast as a rooster (Foghorn), and why the same duck is also cast as him.
- In "Bobcats on Three!", Sam tells an overweight Bugs to lay off of Porky's catering, knowing how unhealthy they are because of the high amounts of butter.
- In "A Christmas Carol", When Mac and Tosh argue over which role they should have in Lola's play, Sam points out which role they pick doesn't matter since nobody can tell which of them is which.
- In "The Grand Old Duck of York" he complains about Daffy's horrible piano playing is keeping him up, and lists off a number of other grievances he has with Bugs and Daffy, including Daffy parking his parade float in front of Sam's driveway. Sam admits he doesn't have anywhere to go but blocking someone's driveway with your vehicle is an offense that can get their vehicle towed.
- Jerk with a Heart of Gold: He's actually honestly kind and helpful once in a while. In "You've Got Hate Mail", he didn't get angry at Daffy's hate email. He instead uses it as an opportunity to become a better person, and even thanks Daffy for it! Too bad it didn't last...
- The Napoleon: One of the shortest characters of the cast and he still has his temper.
- One-Note Cook: In "The Stud, the Nerd, the Average Joe, and the Saint," he claims he only knows how to make chocolate cake.
- Only Known by Their Nickname: His real name is Samuel Rosenbaum, as revealed in "Daffy Duck, Esquire".
- They Killed Kenny Again: In "The Foghorn Leghorn Story", Sam finds the Burmese Turtle, a rare treasure that had to be hid from sight because it caused anyone who would find it to literally burst with joy. Sam does burst with joy upon finding the Burmese Turtle, but this being Looney Tunes, he shows up alive and well to see The Foghorn Leghorn Story, which includes (a very cheap version of) his own death in the following scene.
- With Friends Like These...: Sam tells Bugs in "Mr. Weiner" that he considers him to be his best friend, though one wouldn't be able to tell by his usual behavior. One of the most infamous examples of this is in "Fish and Visitors", wherein he crashes at Bugs' house during a rainstorm and does many inconsiderate and annoying things during his stay while genuinely thinking of Bugs and Daffy as his friends, to the point that they are desperate to get him to leave. In "The Stud, The Nerd, the Average Joe and the Saint", Dr. Weisberg tells Bugs that he needs to get a new friend, since Sam nearly got him killed in a house fire. (Sam was baking a cake to repay Bugs for replacing the batteries in his smoke detector.)

An old lady who is one of Bugs Bunny's neighbors.
- Action Girl: Fought in WWII and everything!
- Beware the Nice Ones: A very sweet old lady. Still capable of laying Daffy out with one punch if sufficiently angered.
- Characterization Marches On: Earlier episodes, and an online platformer game, had an I Can't Hear You personality trait. It was dropped in episodes that, ironically, focused on her.
- Cool Old Lady: She goes skydiving, visits the shooting range, and was a former spy who squared off with Nazis during the Liberation of Paris in 1944.
- Everyone Has Standards: While normally kind-hearted and endlessly patient, even Granny has limits to her tolerance, punching Daffy in the gut after he inadvertently sends her (and almost everyone he knows) a vindictive hate filled email.
- Fiery Redhead: Even though her red hair is gone, the fire is still there.
- I Can't Hear You: Due to her old age, her hearing isn't as strong as it once was. In "Devil Dog", when Bugs asks her if Taz is her pet dog, she tells him she doesn't gamble and that she's been looking for her missing clog. When Bugs tells Daffy that Granny needs a hearing aid, Granny asks them what a cheering maid is, and Daffy goes into a long ramble about cheering maids as Sylvester and Tweety try to evade Taz.
- I Was Quite a Looker: She was quite beautiful
◊ when she fought in WWII at a younger age. - Nice Girl: Like all of her incarnations, Granny is a sweet lady.
- Odd Friendship: With Daffy Duck. Though Depending on the Writer, as at times they're in a more antagonistic relationship, though far less than, say, pretty much everyone else.
- Retired Badass: A former OSS spy during World War II.
- Vocal Evolution: June Foray had played Granny for decades, but during the production of this show, she was in her late 90’s, passing away 4 years after it ended and 2 months before her 100th birthday. As such, Granny has a much more tired and aged voice than before.

Granny's Tuxedo cat and Yellow canary who are always at odds with each other.
- Ambiguous Gender: Tweety. When Sylvester asks if he's a boy or a girl, Tweety whispers the answer into his ear. We never hear it, but apparently, Sylvester's guess was wrong.
- Animal Talk: They play it straight by remaining mute around the other characters, as per franchise tradition. Taz is the only other one the duo talk to directly in "Ridiculous Journey".
- Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: They have their moments of friendship. Most notably in "Ridiculous Journey", where while thinking they're at the end of their rope, they both admit they really do love one another.
- Badass Adorable: Tweety, who bests Sylvester time and time again. And in a story Granny told about World War II, he was able to beat the crap out of Colonel Frankenheimer.
- Butt-Monkey: Sylvester, as per usual.
- Cute Little Fangs: Sylvester has 'em, which is really the biggest change from his classic incarnation.
- A Day in the Limelight: "Point, Laser Point" and "Ridiculous Journey".
- Demoted to Extra: They're fairly minor characters in the show, though they do get A Day in the Limelight every now and again.
- Enemy Mine: They work together to escape the Tasmanian Devil when it gets inside Granny's house... and then in a later episode they both team up with the Tasmanian Devil to get back home after they've gotten lost in the wilderness.
- Not-So-Harmless Villain: Sylvester actually comes close to eating Tweety a number of times in the series, just for something he couldn't anticipate to thwart him.
- Older Than They Look: Tweety, apparently, who served in WWII. Sylvester asks him how old he is, but Tweety refuses to give an answer.
- The Un-Favourite: According to "Point, Laser Point", Sylvester's mother preferred his more handsome brother, Alan, over him. She also criticizes Sylvester's inability to catch Tweety and the fact that he never wears his retainer, and asks him when he's going to get married so she can have grandkids.
- The Un-Reveal: Tweety's age and gender.

A witch who lives next door to Bugs Bunny and is often annoyed at the antics of Daffy Duck. Witch Lezah is also a hypnotherapist by trade.
- Adaptation Personality Change: While she is still a witch who does magic spells, she's no longer a Wicked Witch and is more of serious, motherly figure.
- Adaptational Heroism: She's based on Witch Hazel, a more villainous and Ax-Crazy character.
- Adaptational Name Change: "Lezah" is "Hazel" (the character's original name) spelled backwards. Averted in the Polish dub, which has her original name (probably because name "Lezah" isn't seen in Poland as feminine name).
- Adaptational Seriousness: She's a serious mother figure in stark comparison to her original, more comedic counterpart.
- Dark Is Not Evil: While she looks like a stereotypical Wicked Witch and has a creepy mansion, she's a rather decent person unless provoked (usually by Daffy) and works as a psychiatrist.
- Dub Name Change: The Polish dub keeps her original name "Hazel".
- Mama Bear: Very protective towards Gossamer, which puts her at conflict with Daffy, whom he is friends with. She is also rightfully distrustful of Yosemite Sam and warned her son not to talk to him.
- Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory: In "Best Friends Redux", Daffy accidentally erases himself from history, and then discovers that Lezah still remembers him anyway.Lezah: Child, I am not a witch for nothing.
- Sassy Black Woman: Technically green but she talks like one.
- Sdrawkcab Name: Of "Hazel", her character's original name.
- Witch Classic: Much like her counterpart from the original Looney Tunes, albeit nowhere near as evil.

A large red furry monster who is Witch Lezah's son.
- Adaptational Heroism: From a truly scary villainous monster to a... sweet little boy who just happens to be a monster.
- Adaptational Villainy: When the cartoon was first airing, a platformer game on the Cartoon Network website had him as a boss with a Truer to the Text personality and gruffer voice. It's pretty jarring to see this version of Gossamer attack Bugs and Daffy.
- Adaptation Personality Change: Along with Lola, the character with the biggest personality change.
- Adorably Precocious Child: He is very smart and mature for a nine-year-old.
- All of the Other Reindeer: He's bullied at school, and has difficult time making new friends because of his appearance. He eventually wins over his schoolmates with his singing talents and doesn't seem to have bullying problems anymore in his subsequent appearances.
- Ascended Extra: In Season 2.
- Cheerful Child: He's friendly and generally upbeat.
- Children Are Innocent: Easily the most positive-minded and least cynical character of the show. The worst you can say about him is that he is occasionally Innocently Insensitive, but this is always due to his young age.
- The Cutie: Despite being a big red furry monster, he's also a shy and kindhearted little boy.
- Dub Personality Change: In the Japanese dub, Gossamer sounds even more polite and girlier than the original English version; in fact, just like Tweety, her voice actress doesn't attempt to make him sound like a boy, and he sounds more like your regular cute anime girl instead.
- Gentle Giant: He may be a big monster, but he is actually quite sweet.
- Informed Flaw: According to Lezah, the reason she can't help him with his problem of bullying and friends in school is because he is "in the age where he wouldn't listen to his mother" and the last week called her "witch". Pun aside, this would suggest a rebelious and hypocrite behavior given his situation in school, but he acts like a good and educated kid through the entire episode. In fact, the reason he doesn't fight back his bullies, as he tells Daffy, is because his mother told him that violence is never the answer. He also judges Daffy based on what his mother says about him, and in general is always respectful to his mother.
- Intergenerational Friendship: With Daffy. Gossamer is nine years old and Daffy is a grown man.
- Momma's Boy: He is quite close to his mother and seems to always listen to her given how he frequently repeats her advice.
- Morality Pet: For Daffy, surprisingly. Gossamer is one of the few characters who is almost never a victim of Daffy's Jerkass moments — he may not do a good job of it, but Daffy is sincerely trying to look out for the kid.
- Nice Guy: One of the nicest characters in the show.
- Odd Friendship: With Daffy, considering the great age difference and the fact that Gossamer is very nice and polite, while Daffy is very rude and selfish.
- Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Gentle Giant to Daffy's Jerkass.
- Vocal Evolution: By the end of the series, he sounds several times older due to Kwesi Boakye hitting puberty.
Other Characters

Foghorn Leghorn is a rich rooster who has worked under various jobs. He and Daffy often get involved in various schemes.
- Actually Pretty Funny: The reason he and Daffy get along so well is that he is consistently amused by Daffy's Brutal Honesty, much to the surprise of anyone else in the room.
- Adaptational Nice Guy: Foghorn was more of an obnoxious Jerkass in the original shorts who was just occasionally nice, but in this show he's completely well-meaning and optimistic.
- Ambiguously Jewish: While he lacks the Jewish accent that people like Bugs have, Foghorn is knowledgeable in some Yiddish, with him saying that his favorite aspect about Daffy is that he's, "got chutzpah."
- Cloudcuckoolander: Absentminded at times.
- Cocky Rooster: The "Cock of the Walk" Merrie Melodies music video has Foghorn Leghorn boast about the various accomplishments he achieved in his life. In "The Foghorn Leghorn Story", he deems Daffy unfit to be a rooster for giving up because in his own words, "Roosters are loyal. Roosters never quit. Roosters, I say, roosters fight to the end".
- Eccentric Mentor: He's kind of crazy, but sometimes does give good advice.
- Fire-Forged Friends: He had a rough start with Daffy in "The Foghorn Leghorn Story", but they make up at the end of the episode and remain good friends for the rest of the show.
- Motor Mouth: Downplayed compared to his classic incarnation. He's still a far better talker than listener, and will go on at length if you let him, but in this show it's a lot easier to get a word in edgewise.
- Nice Guy: Much less of a Jerkass than in the original shorts.
- Odd Friendship: With Daffy. Sometimes outright depicted as a father figure to him.
- Parental Substitute: It's heavily implied that Daffy sees him as such, especially in "Father Figures".
- The Pollyanna: Foghorn refuses to see the negative in any situation, no matter how obvious it might be. He even admits it, claiming that the secret of his success is that he "only remembers the positive."
- Self-Made Man: He's a rich, successful entrepreneur and businessman.
- Wealthy Philanthropist: He's an incredibly rich businessman, but frequently uses his vast wealth to help others.
- Wide-Eyed Idealist: Foghorn refuses to see the negative in any situation, and usually sees the best in people. Of course, he ends up becoming one of Daffy's best friends.
Two goofy gophers who run an antique store.
- Ambiguously Gay: They're always seen together and are very open with their affection for each other.
- The Dividual: They're rarely seen apart and have very little in the way of distinct personalities to tell them apart from each other.
- Nice Guys: Played to hilarious extents.
- Overly Polite Pals: They even have a song about it!
- Those Two Guys: They're always seen together no matter what.

A flirtatious, French skunk who has been married seven times.
- Adaptational Nice Guy: In his original shorts, Pepé was a Stalker with a Crush who would never take no for an answer. Here, while he's still a hopeless romantic, he's much better with boundaries and is only ignorant to the repulsiveness of his smell.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: Like the rest of his fellow animal characters.
- Innocently Insensitive: Ignores how repulsed others are about his scent.
- Official Couple: With Lola in "Members Only" to the point of getting married. They break up afterwards though.
- Smelly Skunk: Only in his Merrie Melodies song, "Skunk Funk". In his proper appearances in the show, however, he seems to lack his odor (much like real skunks, which spray rather than just smell bad).
- Yank the Dog's Chain: Finally succeeds in getting a girlfriend with Lola. Too bad it was brief.

A Martian who is one of Daffy Duck's friends.
- Adaptational Heroism: Sort of. He's still plotting to destroy the Earth, but he never did anything really evil. He's actually one of Daffy's friends.
- Affably Evil: Only in a merrie melody. He'll shoot you with his laser beam only if you aren't being polite.
- Aliens Speaking English: A Martian Speaking English.
- Badass Adorable: According to most of the female demographic, at least. In the merry melody "Laser Beam", Marvin destroys a space octopus with his laser beam, and its remains splatters on him as he squeals cutely.
- Berserk Button: This verse from his Merrie Melodies song, "I'm a Martian", says it best.But don't insult my helmet, 'cause then I'll hit the ceiling!
- Demoted to Extra: In-series. In the first season, he was one of Daffy's friends and provided some to the plot of a few episodes. In the second season, he's lucky if he even gets an appearance.
- Disproportionate Retribution: In this continuity.Marvin: Oh! High school was a horrible time for me! Therefore, I have spent every day since graduation plotting to destroy the Earth!
Daffy: Pfff! I hope ya have better luck with that than I did. - Foreign Exchange Student: Was one during high school. The horrible experience of it has caused him to devote his life to destroying the Earth.
- Freudian Excuse: Unlike the original shorts where it's because Earth blocks his view of Venus, here his reason for trying to destroy it is that he was bullied in high school.
- The Napoleon: A mild example.
- Odd Friendship: With Pete, since their high school days.
- The Stoic: Not much fazes this guy.
- Those Two Guys: With Pete, for some reason.
- Token Evil Teammate: The evil part is a strech as he's a friend of Bugs, Daffy, and Porky in this continuity. Still wants to destroy the Earth, though.
A dimwitted puma who is one of Daffy Duck's friends and does various jobs around town.
- Adaptational Heroism: He was an antagonist of Bugs in the original short "Rabbits Kin" but here he's a Kindhearted Simpleton.
- Demoted to Extra: Like Marvin, in the second season where he mostly makes cameo appearances.
- The Ditz: He's just as dumb as Daffy and Lola, or even more so.
- Literal-Minded: In "Sunday Night Slice" when he tries to apply for the job:Pete: I'm here to apply for the job.
Bugs: Oh, great. Take a seat. [Pete takes a chair and carries it toward the exit] No. I mean sit down.
Pete: Oh... right! [sits on the floor while still holding the chair] - Odd Friendship: With Marvin, since their high school days.
- Those Two Guys: With Marvin, for some reason.

Elmer Fudd is the resident newsman.
- Adaptational Nice Guy: Has no interest in hunting Bugs or Daffy this time, despite trying to do so in the original shorts.
- Demoted to Extra: In this adaptation, Elmer mostly serves as the local news reporter. With the exception of a brief interaction with Daffy in "Year of the Duck", he never interacts with the main cast.
- Elmuh Fudd Syndwome: Of course! And yet, somehow, he got a job as a TV news reporter. In-universe Questionable Casting!
- Flat Character: In this adaptation, mind you. He doesn't have any definable characteristics beyond being a news reporter with a speech impediment and an addiction to grilled cheese.
- Trademark Favorite Food: Gwiw- err, grilled cheese.

Walter voiced by: John O'Hurley Other Languages
Lola's parents.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: Inverted, as both of them wear shoes. However, Walter does go shoeless at times unlike his wife.
- Big Beautiful Woman: Patricia. A very pleasant plump woman who is just as pretty as her daughter.
- Big Fun: Walter, while being rather fit, still has a rather bulky body, and is as amicable as it gets concerning parents.
- Boyfriend-Blocking Dad: Normally inverted with Walter, who gets along wonderfully with Bugs, but in "Rebel Without A Glove" he temporarily disliked Bugs because he wasn't himself at the time, due to wearing biker gloves that changed his personality.
- Canon Foreigner: Lola has never been shown with a family in the past, so both were created for this show.
- Cloudcuckoolander: Walter. "Father Figures" has him taking the "throw the line" part in fishing literally, yelling "Touchdown!" while he and Bugs are playing baseball, and getting scared of the tennis court net thinking it's going to get him. He IS Lola's father, after all.
- The Ditz: Walter. Obviously, Lola has inherited her intelligence from him.
- Ears as Hair: Patricia, just like her daughter, though she has her ears wadded up in a ball behind her head, like a hair bun.
- Even the Loving Hero Has Hated Ones: Walter is normally a very friendly rabbit, but he has a particular dislike for Daffy Duck since the latter used his membership number to pay for lots of stuff at the Royal Oaks Glen Oaks Oakwood Oaks Country Club in "Members Only". When Walter finds out Daffy was stealing from him, he punches him in the face and forces him to get a job at the country club as a bathroom attendant to pay him back. In "Father Figures", he’s shown to still have a grudge against Daffy, angrily asking him what he was doing at the country club, since he was banned.
- Flat Character: Patricia isn’t given much of a personality.
- Generation Xerox: Walter and Lola are both airheaded, but nice, people who love Bugs to the point of obsession. They also both love playing tennis, but are really bad at it.
- Ink-Suit Actor: Walter resembles his voice actor, straight down to the hairstyle.
- Kindhearted Simpleton: Walter shares his daughter's friendliness, and also her intelligence.
- Like a Son to Me: Walter feels this way about Bugs. In "Members Only", he calls Bugs the son he never had, and in "Father Figures", he wants to play with Bugs in the country club’s father-son tennis tournament. Patricia seems to feel the same way, since she was happy about the idea of Lola marrying him in "Members Only", and cried at the end when Lola decided not to marry Bugs.
- Nice Guy: Both of them are very nice, like their daughter.
- Parental Substitute: In the episode "Father Figures", Walter was Bugs' father figure so that they could play together in the country club’s father-son tennis tournament. He also uses it as an excuse to take Bugs to do typical father-son activities to bond more as "father & son".
- Shipper on Deck: Both approve of Bugs being Lola's boyfriend. Especially Walter, who even sings a song about how great Bugs is and how he hopes that he becomes his son-in-law. They liked Bugs so much after meeting him, they were perfectly fine with Lola wanting to marry Bugs, even though she and Bugs had just met yesterday.
- Stalker Without a Crush: Walter acts like a stalker to Bugs when he sings Wonderful Bugs, but he doesn’t have a crush on Bugs, he wants Bugs to be his son-in-law. During the song, he’s shown spying on Bugs and at one point, he hides under Bugs’ bed while he sleeps to listen to how quietly he snores.
- Strong Family Resemblance: Patricia looks like a chubby Lola with her ears styled into a bun instead of a ponytail.
- Top-Heavy Guy: While not as noticeable sitting, Walter's wide upper frame and relatively short legs are prominent when he stands.
- Wanted a Son Instead: Downplayed. Walter loves Lola very much, but it's obvious he's always wanted a son in addition to a daughter, and he constantly talks about how he loves Bugs like a son and hopes that he'll marry Lola.
A turtle who formerly worked as a customer service representative at the Trans-Visitron cable company. He later becomes a scammer and an enemy of Bugs Bunny.
- Adaptational Dumbass: The original shorts had Cecil being one of the few characters to ever beat Bugs Bunny by outwitting him. He knows the right things to say to get under Bugs's skin and in his second appearance, was able to see through Bugs's Paper-Thin Disguise, but plays along to exploit Bugs's bruised ego and put him at a disadvantage, counting on the other rabbits being too stupid to realize they're hindering Bugs. Here, as a result of being the one to antagonize Bugs, it is Cecil who falls for Bugs's tricks, being actually fooled by his disguises and played like a fiddle. In his second appearance, when he has Bugs and Porky at gunpoint, Bugs exploits his ego by making him share the details of his crimes and tricking him into sitting back on Daffy's broken recliner, knocking him out.
- Adaptational Jerkass: In the original shorts, he only antagonized Bugs when Bugs was the one being a Jerkass, and existed to knock him down a peg. In this adaptation, he is given an extremely jerkass personality reminiscent of the various antagonists that justifiably deserve Bugs' Karmic Trickster antics.
- Adaptational Villainy: He was willing to kill Bugs and Porky in "The Shell Game" to stop them from exposing his cracked shell fraud scheme, something he would never do in the original shorts.
- Asshole Victim: Daffy gets him fired at the end of "Customer Service" for being late for lunch, just to make his life miserable. After all the grief the turtle put Bugs through, he certainly deserves it.
- Bond Villain Stupidity: In "The Shell Game", he just has to shoot Bugs and Porky, but thanks to his ego is tricked by Bugs to tell them his plan - and activate the old recliner to crash him against a wall.
- Consummate Liar: All of his scams run on pure lies and nothing that Cecil does in the series is honest. He doesn't learn his lesson the first time as he commits the same self-serving plot in "The Shell Game".
- Evil Laugh: He constantly pulls one off in "The Shell Game". This is what makes Bugs more and more suspicious of him.
- For the Evulz: In "Customer Service", Cecil annoys clients of his cable company for the sheer sake of annoying them.
- Hate Sink: Not only does he have no redeeming qualities, he only exists in the show for making other people's lives miserable For the Evulz and scamming them out of their money. There is no depth to his character that could ever make him likable (unlike Daffy, he doesn’t have any Pet the Dog moments or even a Freudian Excuse). All of this was to make sure the audience roots for Bugs to turn the tables on him.
- Jerkass: The biggest jerkass in the show. Even the likes of Daffy, Yosemite and Sylvester have more redeeming qualities than him.
- Laser-Guided Karma: He pretends to have his shell cracked by Bugs and Porky to scam money out of them. In the episode's climax, he gets his shell cracked for real and is later shown to be arrested in the post credits sting. Also happens in "Customer Service" when Daffy, on his firing kick, briefly fires Cecil for being late from lunch.
- Malicious Misnaming: He pronounces Bugs's name as "Byoogs Byoony". One could say it's due to ignorance, but he continues to do so even after corrected, suggesting that he does it solely to irritate Bugs.
- Manipulative Bastard: In "The Shell Game", Cecil manipulates Bugs and later Porky into giving him money in order to fix his shell which was "accidentally" broken by them in two completely separate car accidents that he himself set up.
- Mood Whiplash: Thanks to the suburban setting of the series, Cecil pulled this off to dark effect when he pulled a gun on Bugs and Porky in "The Shell Game".
- Psychotic Smirk: He makes one in "The Shell Game".
- Reptiles Are Abhorrent: The sole Looney Tunes character who is a non-avian reptile, and is one nasty piece of work. It's notable in that it's a rare instance a turtle plays the trope straight.
- Soft-Spoken Sadist: A turtle whose voice sounds gentle and reserved, at which he maintains while maliciously scamming and trolling others and especially when threatening Bugs and Porky with a gun upon being found out of his scam.
- They Know Too Much: Was willing to kill Bugs and Porky after they learn about his cracked shell scheme.
- Took a Level in Jerkass: In his first appearance, he was simply a sadistic Troll, but in his second appearance, he has become a scam artist who has no qualms about killing people if they find out about his fraud.
- Troll: In "Customer Service", where he intentionally irritates Bugs by randomly cutting off his cable, then when he puts the cable back on, he only gets one channel and it's full of Mexican telenovelas!
- Babysitter's Nightmare: A variant; in "Father Figures", Porky enters the Father Figure program and is teamed up with him. Henery tells Porky that he goes through father figures like Porky goes through boxes of chocolate. Porky is determined to prove that he can be a good father figure to Henery, taking him on such activities as watching paint dry and watching grass grow, even though all Henery wants to do is eat chicken, which Porky keeps ignoring because he thinks it's a metaphor for wanting attention. Porky finally realizes that Henery really did want chicken after Henery bites Foghorn Leghorn at the Royal Oaks Glen Oaks Oakwood Oaks Country Club's father/son tennis tournament, resulting in Foghorn becoming hospitalized. When Porky finally serves Henery some chicken near the end of the episode, Henery congratulates him on being the first father figure who didn't give up on him.
- Because You Were Nice to Me: Henery accepts Porky as his father figure because he stayed by him the entire time no matter how difficult he is, unlike the previous father figures who quit.
- Bratty Half-Pint: He's a young child who has made a reputation of causing father figures in the program to give up. He's not just a Picky Eater, but eating chicken is almost the only thing he wants to do. While Porky's ideas of "fun" are very boring, he also keeps running away to do what he wants. That being said, he has a soft spot and respects Porky not just for eventually giving him chicken, but also for being the first father figure that didn't give up on him.
- Brutal Bird of Prey: Well, not as brutal as he is bratty, but he is willing to eat Foghorn despite being a fellow bird-person.
- Disappeared Dad: The fact that he needed a father figure suggests that his birth father is gone.
- Hidden Depths: He seemed disappointed that Porky led him to believe they would play tennis, only to instead just be watching.
- Jerkass Has a Point:
- He's completely right that Porky is literally doing the expression of boringly wasting time by watching paint dry.
- When Porky asks if Henery like tennis, it cuts to them watching a tennis game. Henery points out that the way Porky phrased that made it sound like they were going to play tennis, not watch it.
- Jerk with a Heart of Gold: While he can be quite a brat, he shows off his soft side by accepting Porky as his father figure for being the first to never give up on him.
- Picky Eater: In the "Chickenhawk" Merrie Melodies music video, Foghorn tries to get Henery to eat something other than chicken, given that he's a giant rooster, but as a chickenhawk, Henery insists on eating chicken. After unsuccessfully trying to convince Henery to eat Chinese food, fish tacos, honey buns, a hot dog with mustard and sauerkraut, and even Pork(y), Foghorn does manage to get him to try his grandmother's baked beans. Henery ends up enjoying the beans, but decides that he needs some chicken to go with them.
- Trademark Favorite Food: Chicken. In the "Chickenhawk" Merrie Melodies music video, Henery explains in song how much he loves to eat it."I want some chicken to eat, it is my favorite meat! I like it crispy or glazed, it puts me in a daze! I like it fried up or baked, on my birthday I eat chicken cake!"

A female pig that Porky develops a relationship with.
- Advertised Extra: Appeared prominently in early promotional material and merchandising, with at least two different designs. Grey DeLisle was also originally cast in the role. For some unknown reason, though, her debut was put off until what was essentially the series' eleventh hour, appearing late in Season 2 and speaking in the next episode, which was the third-to-last episode. Exactly why this happened is unknown, though there was clearly some sort of behind-the-scenes politics at play, possibly the executives wanting Porky to earn his happy ending by suffering greatly.
- Girlish Pigtails: Black pigtails, like in the original shorts.
- Love Interest: To Porky, starting with "Here Comes The Pig".
- Nice Girl: She was willing to date Porky, even if he's a Straw Loser.
- Official Couple: She begins dating Porky Pig as of "Mr. Wiener".
- Satellite Love Interest: Unlike Lola and Tina, there is not much depth to her character but being Porky's girlfriend. Though to be fair, she only appeared in two episodes, so it's justified.
- Town Girls: The Neither to Tina's Butch and Lola's Femme. She's a sweet, generic, Girl Next Door.
- You Don't Look Like You: Merchandise released during season 1 featured her early, unused designs.
