The competition for “cheap” soakers remains fierce, with plenty of options in the $10-$15 range. This year, Walmart got Buzz Bee Toys to make the Tidal Striker, a derivative of their “Steady Stream” type blasters that have seen variants for over a decade. However, this is perhaps the lowest capacity I’ve seen from this kind of blaster (only 18.5 fl. oz), and the pump volume is low enough that the “Steady Stream” mechanism may as well be useless. It would seem in this case, too much was given up.
Low Capacity, Inferior Shots
Sadly, in this case, the stream is not longer as steady as it was.
Without the central feature, what’s the point?
In addition, the reduced reservoir volume compared to years past (18.5oz compared to 36 for the Triton) means you simply have fewer shots before reloading. Had the steady stream actually worked, it wouldn’t have gone for nearly as long as years past.
Finally, in testing, I realistically only saw a maximum range of 30′, significantly less than the 38′ advertised. In years past, I’ve seen ranges test at least close to the package claims. So I’m disappointed in this year’s testing.
Last Thoughts
I realize there seem to be two trends in soakers – high end ones with cool features, and low end ones that aim to be as inexpensive as possible. In this case, however, racing to the bottom meant the main feature no longer works fully as intended. The blaster works for simple pump-and-shoot action, but at that point. there are things with much more capacity for the same price.