Right, let’s talk about the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait — the kind of little soft plastic that turns a “blank” into a “yeah mate, totally meant to do that” session. It’s a sinking tremor bait style lure in two size options: 3cm (50 pieces) or 5cm (14 pieces). Same idea, different snack size. If your tackle box is currently organised like a scrapyard, this is one of those baits you can chuck in and still actually find later.
Why This Lure Works
The magic of the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait is not that it’s fancy — it’s that it’s easy to eat. Small profile, soft body, and that “tremor” action that quivers when you do basically anything (even when you do nothing, which is also your strongest technique on some days).
When fish are pressured, or the water is clear and they’re giving your lure the side-eye, subtle wins. It’s the same reason finesse plastics keep showing up in serious bass talk — pros lean on soft plastics when they need bites, not compliments. If you want a proper deep dive into why bass commit to plastics, Bassmaster’s soft plastics breakdowns are a good rabbit hole, and Wired2Fish have loads of rigging and retrieve advice you can steal shamelessly.
Also, the pack sizes matter. With the 3cm 50pcs option, you can fish around rock, current seams, pontoons, jetties — all the places you normally lose tackle — without having a little cry every time you donate one.
How To Fish It
You can fish the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait a bunch of ways, but here are the ones that actually pay rent:
1) Micro jighead swim (the “just get bit” method)
Rig it on a light jighead and swim it through the zone with a slow, steady retrieve. Add tiny twitches with the rod tip. The tremor action does the rest. This is deadly in rivers, streams, and calm ponds when fish want a natural presentation.
2) Hop and shake (for bottom-huggers and moody predators)
Cast, let it sink, then do little hops and shakes along the bottom. Pause often. Most bites happen on the pause — you’ll feel a tick, or your line will just start moving like it’s late for work.
3) Drop shot / split shot finesse
If you’re in the “I want bites, not ego” phase, drop shotting this thing is properly unfair. Keep your movements tiny. Field and Stream have a pile of finesse content that’ll make you want to re-tie everything you own, and Major League Fishing’s beginner-friendly soft plastic guides also explain the basics without the usual fluff.
4) Saltwater edges (yes, it’s not just for bass)
Some listings for this lure family call out a wide range of fishing positions — rivers, reservoirs, ponds, streams, and saltwater spots like rock, beach, and boat fishing. That means you can legitimately chuck it around estuaries, light surf, or rocky points when you want something subtle that still gets noticed.
If you want to build a full soft-plastics “system” instead of random packets floating around your bag, have a browse through the Soft Plastics section and make yourself a little confidence lineup.
If you want extra rig ideas for the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait, have a look at this finesse breakdown on Wired2Fish, plus soft-plastic rigging tips on Bassmaster, and general lure and technique articles on Field and Stream.
Then come back and fish the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait slow, with pauses, because that’s when the Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait gets properly inhaled.
When To Use It
The Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait shines in a few specific situations:
- Clear water: Small and subtle beats loud and stupid. Fish can inspect it and still decide it’s safe enough to inhale.
- High pressure days: When the venue has been hammered all weekend and everything with rattles has been ignored.
- Cold fronts / slow bite: When fish won’t chase, tremor and pauses do the convincing.
- Current seams: Rivers and streams love small baits — they look like easy calories drifting by.
- Mixed species sessions: Little soft plastics catch whatever’s hungry, not just your target species.
Quick “pick the size” cheat code: if fish are feeding on tiny forage or you’re in ultra-finesse mode, the 3cm (50pcs) option is the move. If you want a slightly bigger profile for better class of fish, go 5cm (14pcs).
Does It Actually Catch Fish?
Yeah — if you fish it like you’ve got a pulse. The whole finesse world exists because fish get educated and conditions change. Soft plastics keep showing up in “best bait” roundups for a reason: they’re adaptable, they look real, and they let you control speed and depth easily.
And here’s the sneaky bit: this kind of Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait is also a brilliant “plan B” when your mate is still insisting “they’ll hit topwater any minute now” for the third hour straight. Let him live in his fantasy. You go get bites.
If you want comparable “small bait, big results” options, think along the lines of compact shad-style bodies and micro worms — stuff like the Ajing micro worm set for ultra-finesse, or a slightly bigger paddletail for when they’ll chase.
Gear Pairing
Keep this sensible. The Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait is small, so you don’t need broomstick gear:
- Rod: Light to medium-light spinning rod (6’6”–7’), fast-ish tip for setting hooks on small jigheads.
- Reel: 1000–2500 size spinning reel with a smooth drag (because surprise fish happen).
- Line: Thin braid to a fluorocarbon leader if you want maximum feel, or straight fluoro if you’re keeping it simple.
- Terminal bits: Light jigheads, drop shot hooks, split shot, and small snaps if you’re swapping often.
Want to round out the box properly? Pair this with:
- A baitfish-style soft shad like the Supercontinent shad soft lure when you want more profile.
- A ringed shad option like the Swing Impact Ring Shad style bait when you want extra vibration and body movement.
- A finesse pack like the T Tail Soft Bait rainbow pack for pressured-water shad vibes.
- And if fish are clearly eating craws instead of baitfish, swap to something like the Crawfish Bass Fishing Lure and drag it like you mean it.
Specs
- Product type: Sinking tremor soft bait
- Brand: SUPERCONTINENT
- Material: Soft plastic
- Size options: 3cm (50pcs) and 5cm (14pcs)
- Listed pack weights: 3cm 50pcs 0.013g, 5cm 14pcs 0.5g (as shown on matching listings)
- Model number: 99 (as shown on matching listing)
- Positions listed: River, reservoir, pond, stream, lake, ocean boat, ocean rock, ocean beach (as shown on matching listings)
- Quantity: One set
- Colour options: Multiple lettered variants (varies by seller/listing)
FAQ
Should I buy the 3cm or 5cm option?
If fish are on tiny forage or you’re fishing super clear, go 3cm (and enjoy having 50 pieces). If you want a slightly bigger bite-trigger and better chance at quality fish, go 5cm.
What’s the easiest rig for beginners?
Light jighead. Cast, let it sink a bit, slow retrieve with tiny twitches. Keep it simple and you’ll still catch.
Can I fish it in saltwater?
Yes — matching listings include ocean rock, beach, and boat positions. Just scale your hooks/jigheads for salt, rinse your kit after, and don’t act surprised when something toothy turns up.
Do I need to add scent?
You don’t need to, but scent can help on slow days. Some sellers describe these as scented. Either way, fish it slow and give it pauses — that’s where the “tremor” style earns its keep.
How do I stop missing bites on tiny plastics?
Use sharp, appropriately sized hooks, keep a semi-tight line on the pause, and don’t do a bassmaster hookset for a 3cm bait. Just lean into them and keep pressure.
Final Verdict
The Supercontinent Tipsy Fish soft bait is a proper little confidence lure for finesse sessions — especially when the fish are being awkward and everyone else is chucking noisy stuff for likes instead of bites. Pick your size, rig it light, fish it slow, and let the tremor action do the persuading.
If your mate says “soft plastics don’t work”, hand him one… then enjoy out-fishing him quietly.






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