Kingdom Sinking VIB Lipless Vibration Bait
This sinking VIB delivers a tight, high-frequency vibration that bass pick up on through their lateral line, even in stained water. The internal steel ball adds rattle and casting weight, letting you throw it long distances on spinning or baitcasting gear and cover water fast when searching for active fish.
Built with a lipless body profile, it sinks on a controlled fall and can be worked with a steady retrieve, yo-yo lift-drop, or ripped through cover. It excels for largemouth around grass lines and drop-offs, and for smallmouth working rock piles and points, especially in cooling water when reaction strikes trigger best.
Specifications
| Type | Lipless sinking vibration bait (VIB) |
| Length | 60mm / 75mm |
| Weight | 10.9g / 14.3g / 21.5g / 27.2g |
| Depth | Sinking, adjustable by retrieve speed and rod angle |
| Action | Tight, fast vibration with internal rattle |
| Hooks | Treble hooks, front and rear |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass, pike, trout |
How to fish it
- Cast past the target area and let the bait sink to the desired depth before starting your retrieve.
- Use a steady, medium-speed retrieve to keep the tight vibration running through grass edges and open water.
- Work a lift-and-fall (yo-yo) motion along drop-offs and points to trigger reaction strikes from following bass.
- Rip the bait sharply through the top of submerged grass, then pause to let it flutter free on the fall.
Frequently asked
The 14.3g or 21.5g sizes are a good all-around choice for largemouth and smallmouth, giving solid casting distance without being too heavy for typical retrieve speeds.
Choose brighter, high-contrast colors in stained or murky water so bass can track the vibration and flash, and switch to more natural, translucent patterns in clear water.
A medium to medium-heavy baitcasting rod with 12-17 lb fluorocarbon or braid to fluorocarbon leader handles the casting weight and gives good hookset power on the trebles.
It performs well year-round but really shines in fall and early spring when bass are keyed in on reaction strikes and moving through transitional depths.