Newsflash:

Why Penguins Might Be the Most Self-Important Birds in the World

Penguins look cute but their behavior tells another story. From stealing pebbles to showing off, here’s why penguins may be the most self-important birds in the world

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Penguin self-important

They look polite and cute, but penguins are surprisingly full of themselves. From stealing pebbles to showing off, here’s why penguins have big egos [IC: by Explore]

January 27, 2026

People love penguins because they look polite. They walk like they are late to a meeting, dress like they are going to a wedding, and somehow manage to look serious and cute at the same time.

But if you spend a little time watching them in the wild, you quickly realize something surprising. Penguins are not humble at all. They are, in fact, full of attitude.

Penguins are tiny, well-dressed narcissists with feathers

Take the famous pebble story. We usually hear that penguins bring stones to their partners as a romantic gift. The truth is less sweet and much funnier.

Most penguins steal those stones from their neighbors. Adélie and Gentoo penguins build their nests from pebbles and the moment one bird looks away, another will rush in and grab a stone.

The goal is not just to have a nest. The goal is to have a better nest than everyone else.

Penguins living in the center of the colony, the “important” area, usually have stronger nests. The ones on the edges get robbed again and again. And when a male brings a stolen pebble to his mate, he often does it with great pride as if he bought it from a luxury shop.

Every Penguin thinks it is the main character

Penguins also love to show off. There is a move called the “ecstatic display” where a penguin stands tall, points its beak to the sky, flaps its wings and makes a loud noise.

This is not singing. It is a public announcement: “This is my place. Notice me.”

Even when they walk through another penguin’s space, they do it with a strange proud posture, like someone pretending they do not care while very much caring.

Always dressed always offended

Penguins spend hours every day cleaning and fixing their feathers. Some of them do this even when they are hungry and have not eaten for weeks. They would rather starve than look messy.

Many species also have very strict personal space rules. Come too close and you get a beak or a flipper to the face.

Some penguins are so confident that they even take tiny naps during tense moments, as if to say, “You’re not important enough to keep me awake.”

So yes, penguins are adorable. But behind the tuxedo is a small, proud, slightly dramatic bird that thinks very highly of itself and honestly that just makes them even more fun to watch.

Read more: Eidul Azha: Celebrating Unity, Sacrifice, and National Solidarity

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