Kingdom 180mm Floating/Sinking Long Cast Swimbait
This 180mm swimbait is built for anglers who want a big profile bait that still covers water fast. The slim minnow body carries a diving lip up front and a natural scale finish that reads true at a distance, making it a strong choice when bass are keyed on large baitfish. Available in floating and sinking versions, it lets you match the retrieve to the depth you need to cover.
Three treble hooks run the length of the body for solid hookups on big fish, and the weight is tuned for long, accurate casts even in wind. It trolls well behind a boat and casts just as effectively from shore or a bass boat, making it useful for largemouth working points and drop-offs or smallmouth suspending over deeper structure.
Specifications
| Type | Hard swimbait / minnow-style jerkbait |
| Length | 180 mm (approx. 7 in) |
| Weight | 29 g floating / 33 g sinking |
| Depth | Shallow to mid, adjustable by retrieve speed |
| Action | Wide swimming wobble with a roll on the pause |
| Hooks | 3x treble hooks |
| Best for | Big largemouth and smallmouth, pike, trolling and long casting |
How to fish it
- Cast past the target area and use a steady medium retrieve to let the lip dig in and produce a wide swimming action.
- Work a twitch-pause cadence over points and drop-offs to trigger reaction strikes from bass holding on structure.
- Switch to the sinking version when you need to cover deeper water or when bass are holding below the surface.
- Let the bait out behind a moving boat for trolling open water, adjusting line length to control running depth.
Frequently asked
Floating works well for shallower water and slow twitch-pause presentations, while sinking gets down faster for deeper structure or when trolling.
A medium-heavy to heavy casting rod with 15-20 lb fluorocarbon or braid handles the weight and casting distance well.
Use natural, translucent patterns in clear water and go with brighter or higher-contrast finishes when the water is stained.
The size and profile suit big largemouth and smallmouth as well as pike, especially in lakes with large baitfish forage.