Publisher: Natsume
Developer: Natsume
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E
In some ways, Iโm kind of a horrible person to be reviewing Reel Fishing: Masterโs Challenge. After all, itโs a fishing game, and Iโve been a strict vegan for nearly a decade. On top of that, it features a super-maudlin story about the gameโs protagonist visiting his late dadโs old cabin, where be reflects on his fatherโs life as he prepares to become a father himself. While I get along just fine with my own dad, I canโt imagine there being any kind of similar pilgrimages in my future when that unfortunate time comes, and Iโm probably even more hardcore about my childfree-ness than I am about being vegan. Iโm sure there are ways this game could feature a lifestyle and a belief system thatโs even more diametrically opposed to mine than thisโฆbut Iโm struggling to think of how they might do it.
That said, thereโs a lot to be said for video games as a vehicle for escapism. Iโve never been and almost certainly will never be a trigger-happy treasure hunter, a vengeful Greek god or a farmer, but that never stopped me from loving the Uncharted, God of War or Farming Simulator franchises. Likewise, even if I canโt imagine a scenario in which Iโm actually an expectant father going fishing, I have to say: Reel Fishing does a pretty decent job of making it seen enjoyable.
I think it works for the same reason the Farming Simulator games work. Itโs not flashy or action-packed, but it does a great job of lulling you into its simple, straightforward rhythms. Reel Fishing obviously has much more of a story, but the gameโs basic routine seldom varies: you wake up, you reminisce about your father, you go fishing. Occasionally you break that up by heading down to the store to buy more bait and chat with the shopkeeper, who reminds you of your dad. Itโs not the most riveting game, obviously, but in its own subtle way, itโs surprisingly addictive.
I also think itโs surprisingly grossโฆbut thatโs just my veganism talking. Personally, Iโm kind of appalled by the sight of fish flopping around on the ground after youโve reeled them in, gasping for air as they slowly die out of the water. (And the little subplot of fixing the cabinโs aquarium to house the fish doesnโt excuse it for me.) That said, from an objective point of view, โrealistic-looking fishโ in a fishing game can only be considered a good thing.
I also have to commend Natsume for making a game with such simple, easy-to-understand controls. As the execrable Letโs Fish: Hooked On showed, itโs shockingly easy to make a fishing game with terrible controls, so good on Natsume for making their game so wonderfully intuitive.
In fact, good on Natsume for making a fishing game thatโs better than Letโs Fish in every conceivable way, because by extension that means theyโve come up with the best fishing game on the Vita. Obviously, being the best in a field of two isnโt exactly a momentous achievement, so that label is a little hollow, but at the same time, Reel Fishing is a good enough game that it would probably deserve the title even against much stiffer competition.