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Plop Daddy™ Topwater Lure

Plop Daddy™ Topwater Lure

Regular price $25.99
Sale price $25.99
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Plop Daddy™ Topwater Lure – Make ‘Em Strike Loud and Proud

When the water’s calm and the sun’s up, it’s time to bring out the Plop Daddy™ Topwater Lure — the surface assassin that drives bass wild. With a spinning tail that churns up water like a speedboat, this bad boy mimics wounded baitfish and triggers explosive strikes from the hungriest predators.

  • High-noise prop tail for irresistible topwater commotion.
  • Lifelike 3D eyes and premium paint for deadly realism.
  • Sharp, rust-resistant treble hooks for rock-solid hookups.
  • Perfect for bass, pike, and other freshwater monsters.

Cast it. Plop it. Watch the water erupt — the Plop Daddy™ doesn’t whisper, it demands attention.

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When Bass Won't Bite Deep—Make Them Chase What They Can't Ignore on the Surface

The Topwater Lure That Triggers Explosive Strikes—Even When Bass Are 'Not Biting

Ready to Stop Feeling Subtle Bites and Start Seeing Violent Strikes?

Spinning Prop Tail Creates Distance-Drawing Noise

Rotating blade design that churns surface water and creates vibration that attracts bass from far beyond visual range, pulling fish out of cover and triggering reaction strikes from predators that ignore silent lures—because fish hear the commotion before they see the bait.

Lifelike 3D Eyes and Premium Paint

UV-reactive colors with realistic baitfish patterns and three-dimensional eyes that create the illusion of wounded prey, triggering the predatory instinct that makes bass attack instead of investigate—detail that turns follows into strikes and hookups into limits.

Rust-Resistant Treble Hooks That Hold

Chemically sharpened hooks with corrosion-resistant coating that stay sharp through dozens of fish and won't straighten out when big bass try to throw the lure, so you're landing fish instead of losing them to failed hooks that bend or dull after three catches.

Versatile Topwater Aggression Tool

Works for largemouth bass, smallmouth, pike, pickerel, and any freshwater predator that feeds on surface baitfish, so you're carrying one lure that produces in multiple fisheries instead of a tackle box full of specialty baits that only work in specific conditions—universal topwater effectiveness.

Cast It. Plop It. Watch the Water Explode.

Get Yours Now! 👉
  • Bass exploded on this thing

    First cast at dawn and a 4-pound largemouth launched itself out of the water to hit it. The prop tail creates so much noise that fish come from everywhere. Most exciting fishing I've had in years.

  • Draws strikes from 30+ feet away

    I've watched bass swim from deep cover to chase this lure purely based on the sound. The spinning prop creates vibration that pulls fish out of hiding. Caught my limit in 45 minutes.

  • Caught bass, pike, and pickerel

    This lure isn't species-specific—anything that eats baitfish will hit it. I've caught three different species in one morning session. Universal topwater effectiveness that actually delivers.

  • Paint job is tournament quality

    The 3D eyes and realistic colors look like premium lures costing three times as much. Bass hit it hard because it looks like wounded prey. Quality detail that converts follows into strikes.

  • Hooks held a 6-pound monster

    Hooked into the biggest bass of my life and the treble hooks stayed sharp and didn't bend. Landed a 6-pounder after a brutal fight. Hooks that actually perform when it matters.

  • Better than my $30 Heddon

    I've fished Heddon Torpedoes for years and this Plop Daddy produces just as well for half the price. Same explosive strikes, same hookup ratio. Why pay more for the same results?

  • Works in murky water

    Fished a muddy lake after rain and still caught fish because the noise draws them in. Visual clarity doesn't matter when bass hear wounded baitfish thrashing. Vibration over visibility wins.

  • 20+ bass on one lure

    I've caught over 20 bass on this single lure and it's still fishing strong. Paint has minor wear but hooks are sharp and hardware is solid. Durability that justifies buying multiples.

  • Got my son hooked on topwater

    My 12-year-old caught his first topwater bass with this lure and now refuses to use anything else. Watching fish explode on the surface converted him instantly. That's the Plop Daddy effect.

FAQs

When should I use topwater lures versus subsurface baits?

Topwater works best in calm to slightly choppy water when fish are feeding shallow—early morning, late evening, overcast days, or around cover where bass ambush from below. When water's rough, fish are deep, or cold fronts shut down surface activity, switch to subsurface. Topwater isn't always the answer, but when conditions are right, it's the most exciting way to catch fish. Start topwater, switch subsurface if you're not getting strikes after 20-30 minutes.

Will the hooks rust if I use this in saltwater?

The hooks are rust-resistant, not rust-proof. They'll handle freshwater indefinitely with basic care. Occasional saltwater use is fine if you rinse thoroughly and dry after each trip. For dedicated saltwater use, upgrade to stainless or saltwater-grade treble hooks. This lure is designed and optimized for freshwater bass and pike—saltwater is outside its primary application but possible with proper maintenance and hook upgrades.

What size fish can this lure handle?

This lure is built for bass in the 1-8 pound range—your typical freshwater targets. The hooks and construction will handle larger fish (10+ pound pike or musky) but aren't specifically designed for trophy fish that size. For giant predators, use lures with heavier gauge hooks and reinforced hardware. For standard bass fishing, panfish, and moderate-sized pike, this lure is perfectly suited.

How many fish can I catch before I need to replace it?

Depends on how hard you fish and what you're catching. Quality topwater lures last dozens of fish if you take basic care: rinse after use, store hooks away from other lures (prevents dulling), touch up paint chips with nail polish if needed, and replace hooks when they dull. The body should last seasons. Hooks may need replacing after 20-50 aggressive fish depending on species and fight intensity. This is a working lure, not a collector piece—use it hard and replace components as needed.

How do I work this lure to get strikes?

Cast beyond your target, let it sit for 2-3 seconds (draws attention), then start a steady retrieve with occasional pauses (mimics wounded baitfish). The prop creates noise and disturbance automatically. Vary your retrieve speed—sometimes fast and aggressive triggers strikes, sometimes slow and dying works better. Experiment until fish tell you what they want. When you see a strike, wait a half-second before setting the hook (let them fully commit).