Kingdom Micro Popper Topwater Bass Lure
The Kingdom Micro Popper is a compact topwater bait built for finesse presentations when bass are keyed on small forage. Offered in 27mm/1.5g and 34mm/2.2g sizes, it sits low in the water and produces a soft pop and spit with short rod twitches, mimicking a struggling baitfish or fry rather than a loud commotion bait.
Specifications
| Type | Micro topwater popper |
| Length | 27mm / 34mm |
| Weight | 1.5g / 2.2g |
| Depth | Surface |
| Action | Soft pop and spit, walk-the-dog on light twitches |
| Hooks | Exposed single hooks front and rear |
| Best for | Finesse bass fishing in calm, clear water |
Product description
The Kingdom Micro Popper is a compact topwater bait built for finesse presentations when bass are keyed on small forage. Offered in 27mm/1.5g and 34mm/2.2g sizes, it sits low in the water and produces a soft pop and spit with short rod twitches, mimicking a struggling baitfish or fry rather than a loud commotion bait.
Its light weight and slim profile make it a natural fit for ultralight and spinning setups, especially around calm coves, docks, and clear water where bass get line-shy. Use it for largemouth cruising the shallows early or late in the day, or for smallmouth working the surface over gravel and rock in low light.
How to fish it
- Cast to shady cover, dock edges, or calm flats where bass are feeding on small baitfish.
- Let the popper sit until rings disappear, then twitch the rod tip gently to make it spit without moving it far.
- Pause between twitches, especially after any surface swirl, to give bass time to commit.
- Set the hook with a firm sideways sweep once you feel weight, since the light body can pull free on a hard vertical set.
Frequently asked
The 27mm is better for calm, clear water and pressured bass, while the 34mm casts a bit farther and suits slightly stained water or when you want more surface disturbance.
A light spinning rod with 4 to 8 lb fluorocarbon or braid to leader gives the best action and casting distance for a lure this small.
Use natural, translucent patterns in clear water and brighter, higher-contrast colors like chartreuse in stained or low-light conditions.
Yes, its small profile and subtle action work well for smallmouth around rock and gravel as well as largemouth in shallow cover.
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