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polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:46 am


Introduction


Lets start off with the basics. Yes, you can probably earn a lot more money vendwhoring higher-priced items. Yes, selling fish can be tedious and requires patience. Yes, sometimes it drives you insane.

But is it worth it? For aspiring vendwhores who don't have the capital to really compete in the general marketplace yet, it can be a good start. I've sold over 25K worth of fish and junk in a single day before, and while that may not compare with what some vendwhores can pull in on a good day, it is enough to not ignore the fishing marketplace.

This will be more than a price guide, because price really is not the only factor in sales. Prices will fluctuate, and I will try to reflect that in this guide, but please read more than just the pricing info to really understand how you can sell your fish quickly and effectively, and often for more than you've been charging.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction - You Are Here
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:48 am


How to Use This Guide


While this guide may reflect current prices, please do not think of it as a price guide. The marketplace is almost like a living organism (not orgasmic), constantly changing and adapting.

PLEASE READ:

I have re-written this because this is very important. The price ranges reflected in the posts below are going to change, but I want to explain the methodology.

If you can find fish cheaper than the low range, you should buy it because odds are you will be able to turn a profit. If you find fish higher than the highest range, odds are it will not sell. It could still sell. It only takes one idiot to buy it xd But the likelihood is less.

If the low range price is close to or matches Logan's price, it means there is very little or no confidence in the fish's ability to sell. For example, guppies have sold for 4 or 5 gold, but I wouldn't pay more than 3 g for any guppy because I'm not sure I could/would re-sell it for a slight profit.

If the low range is way above Logan's, that indicates the fish is high in demand.


I'd recommend that you start off by picking your favourite lake, and focusing on the fish market for that lake only. The reason is that you will probably fish there more, have more in stock, and therefore more to sell. You'll also be able to see the patterns in the marketplace by concentrating on one lake instead of all fish.

I will do my best to keep this up to date, but please comment if you see anything that should be updated/changed. By the time I finish this guide, some of it will already be changed. That is just the way the market is, and I'll appreciate any info or insights you may have.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide - You Are Here
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:50 am


Bass'ken fish


Please refer to post 2 for an explanation on the ranges and what they mean.

User Image Yellow Guppy: 3 to 6 g. If you have the patience, you can sell these for 4 to 7 g. Caps work well.

User Image Orange Guppy: 3 to 6 g. Again, require lots of patience. If you want to dump a ton at 3.5, there are orange guppy collectors who buy in bulk.

User Image Red Guppy: 3 to 6 g. The red guppy is the "new" fish released, but doesn't get much respect for it. Probably better off as a cap.

User Image Green Bass: 10 to 15 g. 10 will sell quickly, but if you have the patience, you can do 15 g or sell as a helm. Please read strategies first.

User Image Brown Bass: 10 to 15 g: Same as above. Watch the two together, because when one is flooded, the other is generally empty.

User Image Blue Bass: 12 to 25 g. People may sell for more, but I've rarely gotten more than 20 g. Sometimes you can get 25. This shouldn't be sold for under 15 though.

User Image Gray Striper: 75 to 125 g. The ugly step-child of the striper family, grays are difficult to sell compared to the other two colours. They may sit for a while at 125 g, though 70 to 75 moves quickly, but often to re-sellers.

User Image Blue Striper: 150 to 200 g. This became insanely popular thanks to the new fishing item, the blue fish eyes. 25 blue stripers = blue fish eyes, which retail for 4.5 to 5K.

User Image Green Striper: 75 to 150 g. This shouldn't sell for under 100 g. 125 g is reasonable if you're patient.

Thanks to Gaia for the images

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish - You Are Here
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:52 am


Gambino fish


Please refer to post 2 for an explanation on the ranges and what they mean.

User Image Blue Seedkin: 7 to 12 g. I've never gotten 12 personally. 9 to 10 can happen with some luck. Check "dark head fins" prices as they are a very popular item.

User Image Green Seedkin: 7 to 12 g. 9 to 10 can happen. Might have to be more patient for more.

User Image Pink Seedkin: 7 to 12 g. Pinks should sell for more than the others, but like the red guppy, doesn't get much respect from the market.

User Image Cool Rainbow Trout: 15 to 20 g. 17 or 18 sells very quickly, so there's no reason to price under that.

User Image Warm Rainbow Trout: 15 to 20 g. Again 17 or 18 sells very quickly. Like the bass, if one is flooding the marketplace, the other probably is empty.

User Image Frozen Rainbow Trout: 17 to 25 g. This should not sell for under 20 g. The ceiling is a bit unknown at this time, but you can definitely sell for 20.

User Image Icy Tuna: 75 to 125 g. Tuna have slowly been coming back, but 125 seems a bit too high right now. 50 will probably work, for now at least.

User ImageSpicy Tuna: 75 to 125 g. The spicies seem to get more love than the icies.

User Image Dicy Tuna: 125 to 200 g. These used to get 150 g, then dropped drastically, and are coming back. There's no reason to sell these under 125 g.

Thanks to Gaia for the images

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish - You Are Here
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:53 am


Durem fish


Please refer to post 2 for an explanation on the ranges and what they mean.

User Image White Pebbo Feeder: 11 to 15 g. Some people say they get full value, and they might. I never have. The lower, the quicker they sell.

User Image Brown Pebbo Feeder: 11 to 15 g. I'm surprised even Logan buys these. They're ugly.

User Image Black Pebbo Feeder: 11 to 15 g. 12 to 13 g is probably more realistic for all pebbos.

User Image Bluestone Biter: 20 to 50 g. Biters sell for a lot, though it takes some time.

User Image Black Roque Biter: 20 to 60 g. Seems to get more than bluestones cuz black is black.

User Image Pyrite Biter: 20 to 75 g. Pyrite sometimes gets insanely popular. I dunno why.

User Image Sand Boldur: 75 to 200 g. I've heard even 300 for sand boldurs, though I suspect it was some idiot xd

User Image Stone Boldur: 50 to 100 g. No love for the mutant fish of Durem.

User Image Slate Boldur: 50 to 100 g. Slates are tough to catch, but it doesn't matter since no one seems to care.

Thanks to Gaia for the images

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish - You Are Here
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:54 am


Junk


Please refer to post 2 for an explanation on the ranges and what they mean.

User Image Old Can: 7 to 12 g. The can market has slowed a bit, but you can still earn 8 or 9 g per can. Newbs often sell cans for 5 or under, making this very profitable.

User Image Old Boot: 3 to 7 g. Boots are a bit difficult to move, as the patchwork boots aren't as snazzy as the tin hat is.

User Image Big Old Tire: 4 to 9 g. It's hard to move tires.

Thanks to Gaia for the images

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk - You Are Here
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:55 am


General Market Tips


Okay, now we get to the fun part xd

First off, I hope you fish a lot. It really is more profitable when you combine it with these strategies.

There are better days to sell fish, but you should always keep fish in your vend. You never know who's going to want slate boldurs or blue bass on any given day. Having said that much, the fish market seems to peak on Tuesday to Thursday night, with Friday to Monday being a slower time.

So if you have trouble moving fish on Sunday, don't worry about it. As a result, you may want to keep your gold stored up for the weekend, because you can find some very good deals on fish/junk because the market is so slow.

Always sell in bulk, at least 10 for small/medium, at least 5 for large, and at least 50 (100 would be better) for junk. If a person has to buy 1 fish 10 different times, or can buy 10 fish at once, they're going to buy 10 at once, even if it costs more.

Also, no funky numbers. People do this a lot because they try to sell whatever they catch in a day. So you get 13 brown bass for 187 g, and the buyer has to break out the ol' calculator to figure out the price per fish. Sure, confusing buyers is fun, but it helps to stick to numbers ending in 0 or 5. 10 brown bass will be better.

If your sale is off the first page, cancel your transaction. Once it goes to the second page, the odds of it being sold drop dramatically. It costs nothing other than time to cancel a sale item and re-start it.

Do NOT use the bid option on common fish. It makes no sense to do so because it tends to drag out how long it takes before you can get gold for your fish, and you generally sell for less. If you set up a bid for 1 week, no one will touch it for 1 week, so you sit without gold for that week. Then they buy your fish for under market value. Just don't do it.

You do not have to cut your price to get the sale. This is a big mistake. Someone generally scans the marketplace, sees bass all at 12 g, so they sell theirs for 10. And if no one buys it in a few hours, they sell it for 9. Then they drop their price again to 8...if it doesn't sell at the price you want, keep it and put something else out there. Sometimes certain fish aren't in demand, and all you're doing is screwing yourself out of gold because of impatience.

Small fish are tough to sell, but they can be sold. Sometimes it's luck. But you only get 4 slots to sell stuff. It isn't worth it to occupy one slot with 10 guppies which might bring in 50 g, when you could instead sell stripers which might bring in 1,000 g. So if you're going to sell small fish, make it worthwhile, either with pebbos, or using large quantities.

Stock your store overnight! The market moves much slower at night, which means your sales items get lots of time on page 1. This may vary depending on where you live. I always cancel/re-start my items before I go to bed because if it's already halfway down the page, it will fall off soon. If I stock it up before bed, it stays up for an extra hour or two. Plus it's nice to wake up and find you sold stuff while you were sleeping. Yay gold heart

More to come...

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips - You Are Here
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:57 am


Strategy for small fish


The best strategy for small fish? Filter so you don't catch them blaugh

It can be very difficult to move small fish, which is why many just sell them back to Logan. If you're junking at Durem, this can be a very good strategy.

For small fish, I set aside a few chances for lady luck to rid me of them. Once every few days, I will stock my shop with 20 to 100 of each colour of small fish from one lake, and see if any sell. Never sell in quantities under 20. It's just not worth the effort.

As an example, lets say 50 red guppies, 50 orange guppies, and 50 yellow guppies, at 4 or 5 g each.

One of them might sell, and if someone buys one, they might buy the others too. That's why it's important to use different colours/types, because then you're reaching potentially 3 different groups of small fish buyers at the same time. This is far more effective than selling 20 orange guppies, 50 orange guppies, and 100 orange guppies.

After a half hour, if no one has bought them, I'll try again in a different quantity and price. If no one buys them, I take them down.

Why a half hour? It varies, I confess, but there's a reason for it. Because these fish are so common, by the time a half hour generally elapses, you're already off the first page, which makes it almost impossible to sell.

Usually if someone buys small fish, it happens within 5 to 10 mins of you posting them. It really is hit or miss.

You may want to try caps then. Guppy caps at 400 g do sell, though you can get more if you're patient. Generally, small fish caps, tack on 100 gold and sell. You can get more if you have the patience. Be sure to check the marketplace.

If there are lots of fish but few caps, you should do a cap. It's scary to believe, but a lot of people still don't know you only need 100 fish to make the caps generally. I've sold seedkin caps for 850 to 900 g even though other sellers had 100 seedkins for 750 g up next to the cap.

If you don't want to occupy a vend slot with them though, you're better off just holding onto them or selling them back to Logan.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:59 am


Strategy for medium fish


Bass and trout move pretty quickly, though biters (thanks PVM) are difficult to sell at a decent price.

For brown/green bass, I've found that 25 bass for 375 g works really well. That's 15 g per bass, way more than most people sell for (10 to 12). Maybe it's just that people are bad at math and it confuses them, but that sells very well.

You should check helm prices first though. For one, there are fewer helms on the marketplace. Yes, green and brown bass helms are ugly, yet they still sell. Usually one is flooded, and one is empty. So if there are 8 brown bass helms and only 1 green bass helm, sell a green bass helm, and vice versa.

Also, do NOT price cut. If the helms are only going for 1,000 g (which they sometimes do after price cutting), don't bother, wait it out. Eventually the market clears up and you can sell for 1,300 to 1,600 for these ugly helms.

You can match the lowest price and still sell. If a bass helm is at the lowest price and does not sell, it is NOT because the price sucks (so long as it's reasonable). It just means no one has looked for it. So don't price cut yourself out of a couple hundred gold for no reason.

You should set a number in your mind for what you will sell the helm for. For me, it's 1,300 g. If people price cut, I lower my price to match (not further cut). But once it goes below 1,300 g, I take my helm off the market and wait til better market conditions come out.

Very few bass helms get sold each day, so you do need to be patient. Sometimes it takes 2 to 3 days to sell a brown or green one, even when you have the lowest price. Patience really matters.

Blue bass helms really shouldn't go for less than 1,750 g, and can go as high as 2,500 g. I prefer selling bass helms when I can cuz it's more gold for my vend slot than 25 bass would be, so even if I get less per bass, I make more quickly.

The trout market is very very similar to the bass market. Warm and cool are like brown and green bass, except they will sell for 17.5 and sometimes 20 g. The frozen trout should not go below 20 g, and can probably fetch 22 to 25 g.

The difference is trout helms are very difficult to move, more than bass helms. I don't understand why, because trout helms are much sexier. It may be that most people fish at Gambino, so there isn't much demand for the helms.

The trout themselves however sell very quickly, especially in quantities of 20. 20 warm or cool trout for 350 to 375 will sell pretty quickly, 400 will sell sometimes too. The frozen rainbow trout should go in quantities of 20 or 25 for 20 g each.

You can also sell 100 trout and find buyers, though this is rare. Still, you might want to take a chance and see, as I've had more success with trout than bass.

Biters are different, since they don't get much attention like the rest of the Durem fish. So while they are worth more to Logan, there isn't a significant price increase. You can generally get 18 to 25 g for them in quantities of 20, but sometimes the helms sell better. You really need to watch the marketplace here.

Despite the pyrite being the new fish added on, the black and blue are very snazzy helms that go well with a lot of different outfits, so they are just as popular (if not moreso) than the pyrite biters. So don't expect a premium for the pyrites, like blue bass and frozen rainbow trout get.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:00 am


Strategy for large fish


This is very simple. Do not make helms out of large fish.

I'm serious. Do not make helms unless for personal use.

Large fish are expensive, and so it stands to reason that 100 large fish are very expensive, and going to be difficult to move unless you discount it severely.

It's better to sell in quantites of 10 and 20 here to keep it affordable. People might not have 15,000 g to buy a green striper helmet, but they'll probably have 1,500 go for 10 green stripers.

Watch the striper marketplace very carefully. Though greens are the best, sometimes blue rises up because someone with lots of gold comes in and buys all the blues for a helmet, leaving a shortage. This also happens for grays, and you should search all of these markets before putting yours up.

Tuna dropped for a while there but are slowly coming back. The dicy tuna market is back to over 100 g per fish. Do not sell under 100 g, or you will be killing the market again. Icy and spicy tuna sell well in quantities of 10 or 20, though you could sell more because they are cheap right now. If the price continues to rise though, you'll probably want to stick to 20.

Boldurs are slower in the marketplace than they are in the game. They're tough to move, even at low prices. If you can get 50 g per sand/stone boldur, that'd be awesome. Helmets, even at 5K, are tough to move. You can try to get 50 for them, or 100 for slates, but don't be surprised if they sit in your vend for a while.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:02 am


Advanced Strategies


Here are some advanced strategies. Many do require investing in the market itself, so make sure you have gold on hand.

1. The weekend is shopping time. Desperation sets in, good deals pop up, this is the best time to find cheap fish for re-sell.

2. Buy out your competition. If you find a price point that works for you, press that advantage by buying out your competitors. There's only a limited number of sales done per day, and you want your fish to be in that limited number.

Lets say dicy tuna will sell for 100 to 125 g, and you want to sell 10 of them. But you'll see the market filled with other cheaper fish. 1 dicy for 75. 2 dicy for 100. 5 dicy for 400. 2 dicy for 75. That's 10 loose dicy tunas someone might buy, instead of your 10.

Buy up every dicy tuna in the marketplace cheaper than 100 g. Though you won't earn much profit from them, you have cleared the market of the cheaper competitors, and helped raise the market value of the fish. And you've increased the likelihood of someone buying their fish from you.

The more this happens, the rarer the fish becomes, and the higher the price becomes. Dicy tuna had dropped to 75 g, but has been revived to over 100 g thanks to market vendwhores buying up every cheap dicy they could find.

3. Price-match, not price-cut. If someone drops the price on a helm, cancel your order and match theirs. You do not need to cut further. If two identical priced helms are found, the person on top will get the sale 9 times out of 10, so by virtue of cancelling your helm sale and putting it on top of theirs, you'll get that sale without a price cut.

4. If there are no other helms on the market, set your helm price HIGH. Whoever follows will set theirs under yours, but still high, then you can price-match them like in tip 3 but have a higher price.

5. Search the marketplace for bids. This is a way to score cheap stuff. Fish are NOT high-in-demand items like others, which is why the bid option is crappy for selling. But for buyers, it can be a very very very good deal.

6. If your fish don't sell for a few hours, don't be afraid to take them down and rotate in something else that might sell. Sometimes it's not the price, just people aren't looking for that particular fish.

7. For cans especially, you might want to copy/paste your password. It isn't the most secure thing to do if you're clumsy and accidentally paste it into IM's or other windows you shouldn't, but when vend-whoring, can be the difference between quickly getting the sale and losing out. Just be careful about pasting elsewhere.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:07 am


Rares


I heart rares.

I have nothing to say about it though. I just wanted to have a Rares section in my guide rofl Though I hope one day to have lots to say about them.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:08 am


FAQ


Q. Is this guide 100% correct?
A. No. It's outdated by the time I update it. It's like buying a computer. The market changes by the time you figure it out. And I hope to be completely wrong on a lot of it, because prices will hopefully be going back up again.

Q. How did you decide the price range?
A. The range is from what I, and others I know, have experienced. Of course, it only takes 1 sucker to buy something for way more than it's worth. But these prices should reflect consistent selling points, meaning if you take the time to set it up, it should sell most of the time.

Q. How much can you earn?
A. It depends how much you fish and how aggressive you want to be. I know there are definitely people buying fish and junk. I've sold over 25K worth of fish and junk in a day before.

Q. Wouldn't this end up costing you gold?
A. I don't think so. If enough people get involved in the fishing market and bring the prices up, it will be more profitable for all fishers. The most profitable thing is actually fishing, because your acquisition cost is cheaper thanks to the low cost of bait.

Q. How often will this be updated?
A. Whenever it needs to be and I can find the time to.

Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:11 am


Reserved



Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  

polkaroo79


polkaroo79

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:12 am


Reserved



Table of Contents:

Post 01 - Introduction
Post 02 - How to Use This Guide
Post 03 - Bass'ken fish
Post 04 - Gambino fish
Post 05 - Durem fish
Post 06 - Junk
Post 07 - General Market Tips
Post 08 - Strategy for small fish
Post 09 - Strategy for medium fish
Post 10 - Strategy for large fish
Post 11 - Advanced Strategies
Post 12 - Rares
Post 13 - FAQ
Post 14 - Reserved
Post 15 - Reserved  
Reply
Fishing Fin-atics

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