Kingdom Tsunami 170mm Sinking Soft Swimbait T-Tail Lure
The Tsunami is a 170mm sinking swimbait built for big bass and pike that key on large baitfish. Its soft body flexes through the belly while the wide T-tail kicks hard on a straight retrieve, throwing off vibration and flash that fish pick up from a distance. The internal jighead keeps the bait running true and gets it down into the strike zone fast.
This is a search bait for open water, points, flats, and drop-offs where bass and pike roam and feed on shad or herring. Fish it on a steady retrieve for a horizontal swim, or slow-roll it along the bottom for a subtler presentation. The rigged double hook is ready to fish out of the pack, no assembly needed.
Specifications
| Type | Soft plastic swimbait |
| Length | 170mm (6.7 in) |
| Weight | 55g (1.9 oz) |
| Depth | Sinking, fishes mid to lower water column |
| Action | Wide T-tail kick with rolling body swim |
| Hooks | Internal weighted jighead with rigged double hook |
| Best for | Largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, and pike in open water |
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, moderate-speed retrieve to keep the T-tail kicking and the body rolling naturally.
- Add occasional pauses or short twitches to trigger reaction strikes from following fish.
- Work the bait along points, flats, and drop-offs where baitfish schools hold, adjusting depth by varying your count down.
Frequently asked
At 170mm and 55g it is built to imitate large baitfish, so it is best suited for targeting quality-sized largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, and pike rather than smaller fish.
Use natural, translucent patterns in clear water and go with darker or higher-contrast colors when the water is stained or off-color.
A medium-heavy to heavy casting rod with a reel in the 6.3:1 to 7.1:1 range works well, paired with 15 to 20 lb fluorocarbon or 30 to 50 lb braid for better casting distance and hookups.
It performs well whenever bass or pike are actively feeding on baitfish, particularly in spring and fall when big fish move shallow to chase schools.