Fiblink Piscary Fishing Rod Review
Our verdict
At $80.19, the Fiblink Piscary is an extra heavy, 1-piece trolling rod rated for 80 to 120 pound line, built for large offshore fish. Its 4.4-star average across 151 reviews and 100-plus units sold last month show solid demand in a heavy-tackle niche most rods here don't compete in.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Offshore trollers targeting large game fish who need a rod rated for 80 to 120 pound line and extra heavy backbone, not a general freshwater or light inshore rod.
Skip if
Skip it if you fish freshwater or light inshore water, since every alternative in this comparison is built for far lighter line weights and techniques, or if you need a packable multi-piece rod for travel.
- Material Fiberglass
- Weight 20 Ounces
- Length 6 Feet
- Line Weight 120 pounds
- Target Species Large Offshore Fish
- Technique Trolling
- Priced 60% above the category median ($49.99 across 56 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.4/5
4.4 average across 151 owner ratings
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Popularity2.4/5
151 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
The Fiblink Piscary stands apart from the other rods in this comparison by weight class alone: it's an extra heavy, 1-piece fiberglass trolling rod rated for 80 to 120 pound line, built to handle large offshore fish rather than freshwater trout or bass. At 20 ounces and 6 feet long, it's a compact, heavy-duty blank meant for leverage against big fish rather than casting distance.
None of the context rods here are true rivals on spec. The Okuma CP-LT-762M tops out at 20 pound line, the Ahi RSB-800 at 10 pounds, and the Zebco ZCASTC56TEL at 12 pounds, all a fraction of the Piscary's 80 to 120 pound rating. Price reflects that gap in capability too: at $80.19 it costs nearly double the Okuma and roughly four times the Zebco, though it's still cheaper than the Ahi's $89.99 despite being built for a completely different, heavier class of fishing.
The review data holds up on its own terms: 151 reviews at a 4.4-star average, with 100-plus units sold last month, a demand level matching the Okuma's and ahead of the Ahi's 50-plus. For anyone shopping specifically in the heavy trolling category, that's a reasonably strong pattern of buyer satisfaction and sustained sales.
Pros
- Rated for 80 to 120 pound line, far beyond any general freshwater rod, suited to large offshore fish.
- Extra heavy action and fiberglass build provide backbone for fighting big fish.
- 100-plus units sold last month matches the Okuma's demand level and beats the Ahi's 50-plus.
- 4.4-star average across 151 reviews is a solid, well-sampled rating.
- At 6 feet and 1 piece, it's compact and simple, with no multi-piece joints to manage.
Cons
- At $80.19, it costs nearly double the Okuma ($43.69) and roughly four times the Zebco ($19.99).
- Extra heavy, 1-piece build is not suited to freshwater finesse fishing or casual casting.
- 20-ounce weight is heavier than every other rod in this comparison, a tradeoff for its higher line rating.
- 1-piece construction at 6 feet may be harder to store or transport than multi-piece rods.
- Not a fit for anglers targeting trout, bass, or panfish, since its spec sheet points squarely to offshore trolling.
Specifications
| Material | Fiberglass |
|---|---|
| Weight | 20 Ounces |
| Length | 6 Feet |
| Line Weight | 120 pounds |
| Target Species | Large Offshore Fish |
| Technique | Trolling |
| Size | 6' - 1pc - 80-120lbs |
| Color | Black |
| Pieces | 1 |
| Feature | Extra Heavy |
Performance notes
An 80 to 120 pound line rating and extra heavy action put the Piscary in a different category entirely from typical freshwater spinning or casting rods, built for the leverage needed to fight large offshore fish rather than finesse presentations. At 20 ounces, it's noticeably heavier than the lighter rods in this comparison, but that weight buys backbone, not casting distance, since trolling rods work fish by holding steady tension rather than repeated casting. The 6-foot length and 1-piece build keep the rod stiff and simple, without a ferrule joint to manage under heavy load. Fiberglass construction at this weight class trades some sensitivity for durability and raw strength, a sensible tradeoff for a rod meant to be bent hard against big fish rather than feel subtle bites.
What buyers say
A 4.4-star average across 151 reviews, combined with 100-plus units sold last month, points to a rod that is holding its own in a niche category. That demand figure matches the Okuma CP-LT-762M's 100-plus and clears the Ahi RSB-800's 50-plus, even though the Piscary serves a completely different, heavier-tackle audience than either. For a specialty rod priced above $80, sustaining both a strong rating and steady monthly demand suggests offshore trollers who buy it are largely satisfied, rather than the product relying on a one-time surge of early reviews from a small circle of buyers.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the Fiblink Piscary built for?
It's an extra heavy, 1-piece fiberglass trolling rod rated for 80 to 120 pound line, designed for large offshore fish rather than freshwater trout, bass, or panfish that need a lighter, more sensitive blank built for finesse presentations instead of raw lifting power.
How does its price compare to lighter rods in this category?
At $80.19 it costs nearly double the Okuma CP-LT-762M and about four times the Zebco ZCASTC56TEL, but neither of those rods is rated anywhere near its 80 to 120 pound line capacity for offshore trolling against large, hard-fighting game fish.
Is the demand for this rod strong compared to similar options?
Yes. It sold 100-plus units last month, matching the Okuma's demand level and ahead of the Ahi RSB-800's 50-plus, despite serving a narrower heavy-tackle audience than either freshwater rod included in this comparison, a solid showing for a specialty product.