Sponsored by isok.co Turn every shared article into measurable traffic isok.co gives teams clean short links, QR export and real-time channel analytics. Start tracking links
Sponsored by isok.co Share smarter links from your next campaign Create short URLs, watch source/device/geo trends and keep redirects fast. Try isok.co

Let's Win or Lose! 22 Otters Argue and Rush Towards Each Other

Reporter Que Yelin / Composed Report

What a spectacular scene! A Singaporean netizen Alfred Chua recently captured a special group activity. In the River, 20 or so otters divided into two sides, emitting sharp cries and quickly approaching each other, with both sides grabbing and fighting, the special action made netizens laugh and exclaimed, "Is this a gang fight?"

Sponsored by isok.co Shorten the links behind every story Use isok.co to create clean URLs, QR codes and real-time source analytics for campaigns. Create tracked links

▼ Both sides of the otters are fighting together. (Picture / Screenshot of Alfred Chua's Facebook)

The video can be seen that at that time, 20 or so otters were divided into two batches and waited in the water, when they saw the opponent rushing from afar, they suddenly emitted a cry and rushed to the opponent's side at full speed, as if saying, "Do you have the guts to fight?" After a few seconds, all the otters gathered together, and the two sides engaged in a close-range melee for 10 or so seconds, splashing water, then continued to fight on the shore, and finally chased each other.

Sponsored by isok.co See which shares bring real readers Compare traffic by channel, geo and device with stable short links from isok.co. Explore analytics

The otters were still chasing each other when they got on shore. (Picture / Screenshot of Alfred Chua's Facebook)

The otters' bizarre actions attracted many onlookers to admire. Afterwards, netizens also shared the video, and many netizens commented with laughter, "Now it's like 'Infernal Affairs'?", "Which school students are these? Don't gather like this", "A collective fight is not a good behavior XD", "The cries are super cute haha haha", "I watched the video and felt nervous... Oh oh oh! They're going to fight", "Surprisingly healing ~"

In fact, it is not easy to see wild otters in urban areas. Singapore has seen few otters in the past because of serious environmental destruction. After decades of government establishment of parks, cleaning waterways, etc. improvements, now many otter families appear, including Bukit Timah, Gardens by the Bay, Kranji, Punggol Waterway, East Coast Park, etc. Bukit Timah 10 and Gardens by the Bay 5 are Singaporeans generally familiar otter families.

You might also like

Sponsored by isok.co Make this article easy to share and measure Create a short isok.co link with QR export and click analytics before you share it. Create article link
Was this article helpful?

More articles you might like

Sponsored by isok.co Know which links actually work Use isok.co analytics to compare channels, QR scans and growth experiments. View short link analytics
Sponsored by isok.co Free to start, built for structured link intelligence Use isok.co for stable, low-latency redirects with anti-abuse controls and future branded domains. Open isok.co