Compare 3D Arcade Fishing prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by bumblebee. Published by familyplay. Released on 12/20/2016. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Sports.

Forty-one Steam reviews split almost down the middle tells you everything: this is a narrow-audience relaxer, not a fishing sim with legs. Worth a look if your session budget is twenty minutes, not twenty hours.

I keep a mental tier list of fishing games ranked by mechanical depth, and I'll be straight with you: 3D Arcade Fishing sits near the bottom of that list by design, not by accident. That sounds harsher than it is. The game makes a deliberate trade - strip out rod physics, weather systems, fish AI, and species-specific tackle requirements, and replace all of it with a loop simple enough to learn in about ninety seconds. Cast your line, wait for the audio cue from the optional acoustic fishing guide, time your reel, collect your cash. Repeat. If you are the kind of player who finds Stardew Valley's fishing minigame the highlight of the day rather than an interruption, this is built for you. The progression structure is light but functional. Successful catches bank money that funds better rods, hooks, and bait at the shop, which in turn lets you target larger fish across the 15 fishing spots spread over three lakes - including Loch Ness, which is a nice touch. The roster runs to 11 fish species, from carps and pikes through to eels and brown trout, each coming in variable sizes and weights. None of them behave in ways that will surprise an experienced fishing sim player, but the weight variation does give the reeling sequences a small amount of unpredictability. You pick from nine character models (six male, three female) before heading out, and while that choice has zero gameplay impact, it is a harmless bit of personalisation that fits the game's low-pressure identity. Where the wheels come off is longevity. The core loop does not evolve in any meaningful way once you understand the cast-and-reel timing. There is no weather system affecting bite rates, no bait-placement strategy, no AI that changes behaviour by species or time of day. After you have unlocked the upper equipment tier and fished all 15 spots, the only remaining pull is the Steam achievement list and the leaderboards - thin hooks for long-term retention. The visuals are bright and functional rather than impressive, and the Steam review split sitting at roughly 53 percent positive on 41 reviews is an honest signal: players who expected more variety came away underwhelmed. Who should actually consider this? Parents looking for something genuinely low-stakes to share with a young child, or anyone who wants something running in a second monitor while half-watching a stream. It is cross-platform on PC, Mac, and Linux, which is genuinely convenient. No mod ecosystem, no co-op, no depth beyond the surface - but if the surface is all you need for a twenty-minute session, the game delivers that reliably. Just do not come in expecting anything close to a simulation. Diego, Scout Team

3D Arcade Fishing
CasualSimulationSports

3D Arcade Fishing

Dec 20, 2016bumblebeefamilyplay
GamerScout Says

Forty-one Steam reviews split almost down the middle tells you everything: this is a narrow-audience relaxer, not a fishing sim with legs. Worth a look if your session budget is twenty minutes, not twenty hours.

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About 3D Arcade Fishing

I keep a mental tier list of fishing games ranked by mechanical depth, and I'll be straight with you: 3D Arcade Fishing sits near the bottom of that list by design, not by accident. That sounds harsher than it is. The game makes a deliberate trade - strip out rod physics, weather systems, fish AI, and species-specific tackle requirements, and replace all of it with a loop simple enough to learn in about ninety seconds. Cast your line, wait for the audio cue from the optional acoustic fishing guide, time your reel, collect your cash. Repeat. If you are the kind of player who finds Stardew Valley's fishing minigame the highlight of the day rather than an interruption, this is built for you. The progression structure is light but functional. Successful catches bank money that funds better rods, hooks, and bait at the shop, which in turn lets you target larger fish across the 15 fishing spots spread over three lakes - including Loch Ness, which is a nice touch. The roster runs to 11 fish species, from carps and pikes through to eels and brown trout, each coming in variable sizes and weights. None of them behave in ways that will surprise an experienced fishing sim player, but the weight variation does give the reeling sequences a small amount of unpredictability. You pick from nine character models (six male, three female) before heading out, and while that choice has zero gameplay impact, it is a harmless bit of personalisation that fits the game's low-pressure identity. Where the wheels come off is longevity. The core loop does not evolve in any meaningful way once you understand the cast-and-reel timing. There is no weather system affecting bite rates, no bait-placement strategy, no AI that changes behaviour by species or time of day. After you have unlocked the upper equipment tier and fished all 15 spots, the only remaining pull is the Steam achievement list and the leaderboards - thin hooks for long-term retention. The visuals are bright and functional rather than impressive, and the Steam review split sitting at roughly 53 percent positive on 41 reviews is an honest signal: players who expected more variety came away underwhelmed. Who should actually consider this? Parents looking for something genuinely low-stakes to share with a young child, or anyone who wants something running in a second monitor while half-watching a stream. It is cross-platform on PC, Mac, and Linux, which is genuinely convenient. No mod ecosystem, no co-op, no depth beyond the surface - but if the surface is all you need for a twenty-minute session, the game delivers that reliably. Just do not come in expecting anything close to a simulation. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Acoustic Assist ModeShort SessionProgression ShopMulti-PlatformTrophy FishingKid-FriendlyLow Mechanical Depth

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11 (32/64bit versions)
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
512MB
Processor
Dual-Core: 2Ghz

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Game Info

Developer
bumblebee
Publisher
familyplay
Release Date
Dec 20, 2016

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3D Arcade Fishing is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Nintendo Switch.

When was 3D Arcade Fishing released?

3D Arcade Fishing was released on 20 December 2016.

Who developed 3D Arcade Fishing?

3D Arcade Fishing was developed by bumblebee and published by familyplay.