Compare Ultimate Fishing Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Pancake Games. Published by PlayWay S.A., Ultimate Games S.A.. Released on 8/30/2018. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Sports. Metacritic score: 70/100.

A deep, methodical fishing sim with real tackle mechanics and a surprisingly large water to explore. Pure patience rewarded.

Ultimate Fishing Simulator is exactly what the title says, and it commits to that premise without apology. This is a simulation of fishing, not an action game with fish in it. You select your rod, reel, line weight, hook size, and lure or bait, then cast into one of several distinct locations, each with their own species, seasonal conditions, and depth profiles. The loop is slow, deliberate, and oddly satisfying once the mechanics click. For players who want to optimise, there is genuine depth here: different lure colours and retrieve speeds produce measurably different bite rates depending on species, time of day, and weather. From a systems perspective, the game tracks a lot of variables quietly in the background. Water temperature affects fish behaviour. Casting accuracy determines where your bait lands relative to underwater structures visible on a sonar display. Switching from a spinning rod setup to a feeder rig for bottom-feeding species is not cosmetic, it changes what bites and when. That level of mechanical specificity is what separates this from a casual time-sink, even if the presentation stays firmly in low-budget territory. The visuals are serviceable rather than stunning, and the UI takes a session or two to stop feeling clunky. For newcomers to the genre, the learning curve is gentler than it first appears. The in-game encyclopedia explains species behaviour and recommended tackle, and the progression system gates more complex gear gradually, so you are not immediately overwhelmed by the full equipment catalogue. That said, the tutorial is thin, and the game will happily let you waste in-game currency on tackle combinations that are actively counterproductive for your current fishing spot. Reading the community guides on Steam is time well spent before your first few sessions. The mod ecosystem is modest but present, with additional locations and equipment released both officially and through the community. The base game already includes multiple lakes and ponds, but the DLC map additions are where the content expands significantly. Whether that additional content is worth the extra cost depends entirely on how deep into the loop you fall. If you find yourself checking spawn tables and optimising your retrieve cadence, you will want more water. If the base game starts feeling repetitive before you hit the mid-tier gear unlocks, the DLC probably will not fix that. With an 89% positive rating across nearly nine thousand Steam reviews, the audience clearly finds the core loop rewarding. The Metacritic score of 70 reflects a critical consensus that the game is competent but unspectacular, which is an accurate read. This is not a genre-redefining experience. It is a well-tuned, honest fishing simulator that respects the patience the hobby actually demands. If you have ever killed four hours at a real lakeside and considered that time well spent, the logic here is the same. Diego, Scout Team

Ultimate Fishing Simulator
CasualSimulationSports

Ultimate Fishing Simulator

Aug 30, 2018Pancake GamesPlayWay S.A., Ultimate Games S.A.
GamerScout Says

A deep, methodical fishing sim with real tackle mechanics and a surprisingly large water to explore. Pure patience rewarded.

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About Ultimate Fishing Simulator

Ultimate Fishing Simulator is exactly what the title says, and it commits to that premise without apology. This is a simulation of fishing, not an action game with fish in it. You select your rod, reel, line weight, hook size, and lure or bait, then cast into one of several distinct locations, each with their own species, seasonal conditions, and depth profiles. The loop is slow, deliberate, and oddly satisfying once the mechanics click. For players who want to optimise, there is genuine depth here: different lure colours and retrieve speeds produce measurably different bite rates depending on species, time of day, and weather. From a systems perspective, the game tracks a lot of variables quietly in the background. Water temperature affects fish behaviour. Casting accuracy determines where your bait lands relative to underwater structures visible on a sonar display. Switching from a spinning rod setup to a feeder rig for bottom-feeding species is not cosmetic, it changes what bites and when. That level of mechanical specificity is what separates this from a casual time-sink, even if the presentation stays firmly in low-budget territory. The visuals are serviceable rather than stunning, and the UI takes a session or two to stop feeling clunky. For newcomers to the genre, the learning curve is gentler than it first appears. The in-game encyclopedia explains species behaviour and recommended tackle, and the progression system gates more complex gear gradually, so you are not immediately overwhelmed by the full equipment catalogue. That said, the tutorial is thin, and the game will happily let you waste in-game currency on tackle combinations that are actively counterproductive for your current fishing spot. Reading the community guides on Steam is time well spent before your first few sessions. The mod ecosystem is modest but present, with additional locations and equipment released both officially and through the community. The base game already includes multiple lakes and ponds, but the DLC map additions are where the content expands significantly. Whether that additional content is worth the extra cost depends entirely on how deep into the loop you fall. If you find yourself checking spawn tables and optimising your retrieve cadence, you will want more water. If the base game starts feeling repetitive before you hit the mid-tier gear unlocks, the DLC probably will not fix that. With an 89% positive rating across nearly nine thousand Steam reviews, the audience clearly finds the core loop rewarding. The Metacritic score of 70 reflects a critical consensus that the game is competent but unspectacular, which is an accurate read. This is not a genre-redefining experience. It is a well-tuned, honest fishing simulator that respects the patience the hobby actually demands. If you have ever killed four hours at a real lakeside and considered that time well spent, the logic here is the same. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamTackle CustomisationSpecies VarietySonar MechanicsProgression SystemSeasonal ConditionsDLC MapsRelaxing GameplaySingle-Player Only

System Requirements

System requirements for Ultimate Fishing Simulator aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
70
Steam
89%(8,755)

Game Info

Developer
Pancake Games
Publisher
PlayWay S.A., Ultimate Games S.A.
Release Date
Aug 30, 2018

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