WOLFUL WF88SPN0001 Spoons Review
Our verdict
The WOLFUL WF88SPN0001 spoon set costs $19.99 for 20 pieces across 20 colors, totaling just 0.08 kilograms. It holds a 4.5 star rating over only 10 reviews and 100+ bought last month, a smaller sample than every comparison spoon here, so treat the rating as an early read rather than a settled one.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who want a large 20-piece, 20-color assortment of small single-hook spoons for covering many presentations in one $19.99 order, without needing a deep review history to feel confident.
Skip if
Skip it if you want a track record to lean on, since 10 reviews is far short of the 191 to 426 review counts behind the Johnson and Berkley spoons in this comparison, or if you want the lowest price per lure.
- Material Metal
- Weight 0.08 Kilograms
- Technique Single Hook
- Color 20-color-SPN0001
- Pieces 20
- Priced 107% above the category median ($9.64 across 14 tracked models)
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 average across 10 owner ratings
-
Popularity1.4/5
10 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
Rigging up for a day that might swing between finicky bites and aggressive strikes usually means digging through several packs of spoons for the right size and color. The WOLFUL WF88SPN0001 set tries to cover that in one box, packing 20 single-hook spoons across 20 colors into a $19.99 order at a combined 0.08 kilograms.
At 4.5 stars, the rating sits close to the Johnson SM11/8-GLD's 4.4 stars and the Johnson SM3/4-GLD's 4.6 stars, but it rests on just 10 reviews, a fraction of the 191, 426, and 393 reviews backing the three comparison spoons here. That makes the WOLFUL set the least proven by volume even though its early rating looks solid. The 20-color, 20-piece format also puts it in a different category from the single-lure Johnson and Berkley spoons, more of a starter assortment than a targeted lure choice.
Bought last month sits at 100+, the same tier as the Berkley SM1/2-GLD's 100+ figure, so demand is real if modest. For anglers who want breadth of color and piece count over a deep review history, the $19.99 price for 20 spoons works out cheaper per piece than buying single spoons individually, though the small review base means the 4.5 star average deserves a grain of caution.
Pros
- 20 pieces across 20 colors in one $19.99 set covers far more variety than the single-lure comparison spoons.
- 4.5 star rating is close to the Johnson SM11/8-GLD's 4.4 stars and the Johnson SM3/4-GLD's 4.6 stars.
- 100+ bought last month matches the Berkley SM1/2-GLD's demand tier.
- Metal construction with a single hook technique for straightforward rigging.
- Works out to about a dollar per spoon across the 20-piece set.
Cons
- Only 10 reviews back the 4.5 star rating, far fewer than the 191 to 426 reviews behind the comparison spoons.
- At $19.99 for the set it costs more upfront than any single comparison spoon, even though the per-piece cost is lower.
- 0.08 kilograms total weight across 20 pieces suggests each spoon is small and light duty.
- No target species or weight-per-piece spec listed, unlike the more detailed Johnson and Berkley listings.
Specifications
| Material | Metal |
|---|---|
| Weight | 0.08 Kilograms |
| Technique | Single Hook |
| Color | 20-color-SPN0001 |
| Pieces | 20 |
Performance notes
Twenty pieces at a combined 0.08 kilograms works out to roughly 4 grams per spoon, a light build meant for finesse presentations and smaller fish rather than long-distance casting or big game. The single hook technique keeps rigging simple compared to treble hook spoons like the Johnson SM11/8-GLD, and it can also mean fewer snags on structure, though it may hook up less securely on a hard strike. Twenty colors in one box gives anglers a full spread to match water clarity, light, and forage color without buying separate packs, which suits anglers who like to experiment across several spots in a single outing. Given the metal build, a rinse after saltwater use is a reasonable habit, the same as with any uncoated metal spoon, since the listing does not specify a corrosion-resistant coating.
What buyers say
Ten reviews is a thin sample, the smallest of any spoon in this comparison, so the 4.5 star average should be read as an early signal rather than a settled verdict. It sits between the Johnson SM11/8-GLD's 4.4 stars over 191 reviews and the Johnson SM3/4-GLD's 4.6 stars over 426, both far more established. The 100+ bought last month figure matches the Berkley SM1/2-GLD's own 100+ pace, which suggests steady if not explosive demand for a 20-piece assortment at this price. Buyers appear willing to try a larger, lower-review set for the color and piece variety, but anyone wanting a proven track record should weigh the much larger review counts on the comparison spoons first.
Similar fishing gear and tackle to consider
- 10pcs$18.99100+ bought last monthView on Amazon
- 6Pcs
6Pcs Saltwater Fishing Lures with Box, Reflective Jigs Spoon Lure
$8.99100+ bought last monthView on Amazon
Featured in
Frequently asked questions
How many spoons come in the WOLFUL WF88SPN0001 set?
The set includes 20 pieces across 20 different colors for $19.99, working out to roughly a dollar per spoon. That is a much larger piece count than the single-lure Johnson and Berkley spoons in this comparison, though those carry far more reviews.
Is a 10-review rating reliable for this spoon set?
Ten reviews is a small sample compared to the 191 to 426 reviews behind the comparison spoons, so the 4.5 star average is an early indicator rather than a proven long-term result. The 100+ bought last month figure suggests real demand alongside that early rating.
What hook technique does this spoon use?
The listing specifies a single hook technique rather than a treble hook setup like the Johnson SM11/8-GLD. A single hook can mean fewer snags around structure, though anglers used to treble hooks on spoons may notice the difference in hookup feel.