@@AntiNuLL I first played it at Chuck E Cheese around 1998 and I had to get a Dreamcast to just to have the game, the PS2 port was disappointing, the Wii was okay, but I did buy it on Steam for PC. It reminds me of those classic play games that use to be Electro-Mechanical shooting games. The fishing rod pull was my favorite part.
Very awesome cabinet. I wonder, though, if it's possible to play Star Wars Trilogy or Ocean Hunter in it by changing out the board (they are both Model 3), since the fishing controller of the machine is mounted and analog. For Star Wars you would need the additional sound hardware for the classic John Williams music, however.
Awesome, awesome, awesome!
Glad you liked it!
@@AntiNuLL I first played it at Chuck E Cheese around 1998 and I had to get a Dreamcast to just to have the game, the PS2 port was disappointing, the Wii was okay, but I did buy it on Steam for PC. It reminds me of those classic play games that use to be Electro-Mechanical shooting games. The fishing rod pull was my favorite part.
Very awesome cabinet. I wonder, though, if it's possible to play Star Wars Trilogy or Ocean Hunter in it by changing out the board (they are both Model 3), since the fishing controller of the machine is mounted and analog. For Star Wars you would need the additional sound hardware for the classic John Williams music, however.
Wow, how cool sega bass fishing in a candy cabinet..😳
yes, and now it is a raspberry pi in a candy cabinet (don't worry I didn't cut a single wire and have the old boards and controls)
I caught huge fish in that game arcade sega bass fishing in 2019
very cool, i should set the fishing game back up one of these days
@@AntiNuLL yeah I used to have my grandad but unfortunately he died 2 years ago
That set up looks rubbish I prefer the proper arcade cab
not a fan of Sega Blast City "candy cabinets"?
It's okay cause its a mame cabinet and the bass fishing stuff is in a box
@@AntiNuLL the official cab you numpty
All blast city in the US were sega bass fishing setups