Call of the Wild The Angler™ - Japan Fishing Reserve (DLC)
A Japanese-themed fishing reserve DLC that adds new waters and species to an already sprawling open-world angling sim. Worth it only if you're already hooked.
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About Call of the Wild The Angler™ - Japan Fishing Reserve (DLC)
Call of the Wild: The Angler is an open-world fishing simulation that sits somewhere between a relaxed weekend hobby and a surprisingly detailed catch-and-release spreadsheet. The base game tasks you with locating, identifying, and landing fish across large open reserves, and the Japan Fishing Reserve DLC extends that formula with a new map set in a stylised Japanese landscape, bringing along region-specific fish species and fresh terrain to explore. If you are the kind of player who genuinely wants to catalogue every species variant and squeeze the most out of every body of water, this DLC delivers more square kilometres and more entries for your logbook. As a strategy-and-sim reviewer, what catches my attention here is not just the scenery but the underlying decision loop. Fishing in The Angler has more mechanical texture than it first appears. Rod selection, tackle configuration, bait type, water depth, time of day, and weather conditions all feed into your catch probability. The Japan reserve introduces species that demand you adapt those variables, which means players who have already optimised their approach on earlier maps will need to recalibrate. That layer of gear-and-condition management is where the game earns its simulation label, even if it never gets as granular as a dedicated fishing sim like Fishing Planet. The co-op component is worth flagging because it genuinely changes the experience. Bringing friends into a session turns what could be a solitary, meditative grind into something more social and coordinated. You can split up to scout different zones or work the same spot together and compare results. On the Japan reserve specifically, the varied terrain - rivers, lakes, and coastal inlets - gives groups enough geographic spread to make co-op feel purposeful rather than redundant. Solo play is equally valid but the feedback loop is slower without someone to compare catches with. Where the DLC falls short is harder to ignore given its Mixed review score. The base game itself carries a 63 percent positive rating, which signals a player base with real frustrations. Common complaints centre on repetitive moment-to-moment gameplay, AI fish behaviour that can feel scripted rather than reactive, and technical rough edges that Expansive Worlds has patched inconsistently. The Japan reserve does not resolve those systemic issues; it just gives you a prettier backdrop while you live with them. If the core fishing loop has already worn thin for you, a new map is unlikely to reignite the passion. For newcomers deciding whether to buy the base game plus this DLC together, the honest answer is: start with the base game, put in twenty or thirty hours, and only then judge whether a paid reserve expansion earns its place. The tutorial does a reasonable job explaining rod mechanics and tackle basics, so the learning curve is not steep. The depth is real, the world is genuinely large, and the co-op hooks are solid. But the ceiling is also real, and it arrives sooner than the map size implies. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Expansive Worlds
- Publisher
- Avalanche Studios
- Release Date
- Aug 31, 2022