Free horror fishing game
Screenshots
A Wonderful Day For Fishing is a free horror fishing game where you sit in a boat and cast your line to fish. Whenever you see an exclamation appear above the character’s head, you can reel in your catch. If you’re keen on a fish game with more detailed mechanics, you can try Fishing Craze, Fish Tales and Feed and Grow: Fish.
The goal of A Wonderful Day For Fishing is to wait and see what you catch. The longer you play it, the more strange things start to happen to you and your surroundings. The developer created it as an experiment to showcase what loneliness and isolation can do to you, driving you insane.
Casual fishing day
You start your adventure in A Wonderful Day For Fishing by sitting in a boat casting your line. The exclamation mark that appears indicates that you have a bite, which is when you reel the line. A window appears, displaying what you caught with an adorable note under the name describing the item. The game automatically casts your line again.
Horrific events
As the day progresses, strange things begin to happen. You catch headless fish or weird flesh cubes. The choice is yours to eat or release them, and it will affect what happens next. Your eyes may start bleeding, the sky can turn red, or the river changes to blood. In the end, you won’t really be able to escape what happens to you.
Basic graphics
The visuals for A Wonderful Day For Fishing have basic graphics with a 2D environment. There aren’t many animations, but you’ll be waiting eagerly to see what you catch next. Even without AAA visuals, it’s still an impressive display that introduces horror elements at the right time.
Unsafe fishing
A Wonderful Day For Fishing is an intriguing game that investigates loneliness and isolation. You spend so much time at the river or lake, that your mind sees crazy things, and you don’t know what is real or not.
The different fishes and later creatures are interesting, and it makes you wonder what will happen to you next. Sadly, the ending comes too soon, and there’s nothing more you can do to escape what’s to come.