Fishing • Paradise 2
Paradise 2: a complete how-to guide for CQ9Gaming’s treasure fishing shooter
Paradise 2 is a fishing shooter built around one simple idea: every bullet is a wager. That makes it feel like an arcade game, but it behaves like a casino game. This tutorial teaches the systematic approach that keeps the game fun: pick a base cannon, aim for center-lane screen time, use caps per target, and treat treasure and bosses as short windows with strict exits.
Depth note: this page is intentionally written at 3000+ words to rank for searches like “Paradise 2 how to play”, “Paradise 2 tips and tricks”, “Paradise 2 boss”, “Paradise 2 treasure chest”, “Paradise 2 RTP”, and “Paradise 2 demo”.
What makes it special
Treasure targets + boss windows
Lanes and caps are your edge.
Foundation
Base cannon
One level most shots.
Control
Caps
Budget each attempt.
Aim
Center lane
More screen time.
Exit
Timer
Stop on schedule.

Overview: what Paradise 2 is and how to play it well
Paradise 2 is a casino-style fishing shooter: targets move across the screen, you fire bullets from your cannon, and you receive rewards when a target is captured. It feels more interactive than a reel slot because aim and timing matter, but the cost model is also more dangerous: you pay per bullet, not per spin. That means overspending can happen quickly if you hold the trigger on low-quality shots.
The key to playing Paradise 2 safely is to separate the game into two modes. Mode A is farming: low cannon, center-lane shots, short bursts, and quick target rotation. Mode B is premium attempts: treasure and bosses. Premium attempts are short windows with strict caps. You do not drift into premium play; you schedule it.
This tutorial is intentionally practical. It does not promise guaranteed profit. Instead, it teaches what you can control: your cannon level, your pace, which targets you attempt, how long you commit, and when you stop.
If you read only one sentence from this page, make it this: Paradise 2 rewards players who can exit cleanly. Clean exits turn the game into a series of small, controlled decisions, which is how you get a stable experience even when variance is high.
Quick facts
Provider
CQ9Gaming
SlotCatalog lists Paradise 2 as a CQ9Gaming title.
Release
2025-07-17
Release date is listed in the Paradise 2 attributes table on SlotCatalog.
Type
Fishing shooter (arcade)
This is not a reel slot. You aim and shoot targets; each bullet is a wager.
RTP
96%
SlotCatalog lists RTP 96%. Short sessions can swing widely because the game spends per bullet.
Max win
Up to x1000
SlotCatalog lists max win x1000. Big outcomes usually come from planned boss/treasure windows.
Bet range
0.1–100
SlotCatalog lists min bet 0.1 and max bet 100 (currency equivalent).
Technology
JS, HTML5
Built for modern browsers; typically smooth on mobile if the network is stable.
Game size
31.3 MB
SlotCatalog lists the size as 31.3 MB.
Source note: numbers like RTP, release date, max win, and bet range are taken from the Paradise 2 attributes table on SlotCatalog. Casinos can differ in currency mapping and UI, but the strategy principles are consistent.
How to start Paradise 2 on 6 Club
Your first session should be about control, not about proving something. Fishing shooters can feel intense, especially when treasure targets appear. If you build control first, you will enjoy the game more long-term.
Open Paradise 2 from Fishing
In 6 Club, go to Our Games → Fishing and choose Paradise 2. The Fishing gallery uses your local thumbnail (paradise 2.webp) and routes to this guide at /our-games/fishing/paradise-2.
Treat every bullet like a mini-spin
Paradise 2 is an arcade shooter, but its economics resemble a casino game: each bullet costs money. That means your pace matters as much as your aim. If you fire constantly, you can spend a full session in minutes without noticing.
Pick a base cannon you can hold calmly
Set your default cannon/bet-per-shot level low enough that you can play for 20–30 minutes without feeling pressured. This becomes your ‘base cannon’ used for most targets.
Add one guardrail: caps
Set a bullet cap (or time cap) per target. If the target doesn’t drop within the cap, you stop and rotate. Caps protect you from long chases, especially on bosses and treasure targets.
Warm up in the center lane
Start by shooting targets that stay visible and cross the center of the screen. Center-lane shots have more on-screen time, which makes your hit-rate higher and your spending more efficient.
A simple promise
If you can follow caps in demo mode, you can follow caps in real play. If you can’t follow caps in demo, you should not increase cannon in real play. Caps are not a restriction. Caps are your safety system.
Controls and UI: what matters most
Paradise 2 can look busy. You don’t need to understand every animation to play well. You need to master the controls that affect your cost per minute and your accuracy. Think of this section as your “dashboard”: if you know what each control does to the budget, you can make better decisions under pressure.
Cannon level (cost per bullet)
This is your main budget knob. If you increase the cannon, you increase burn rate. Most profitable-looking moments in fishing games are simply high burn rate combined with short-term variance. Use a base cannon for normal play and reserve step-ups for planned windows.
Aim and lead
Aim is not just pointing at a fish. You want bullets to connect efficiently. Lead fast targets slightly, and avoid shooting targets that are about to leave the screen. High hit-rate equals lower cost per capture.
Auto fire vs manual bursts
Auto fire can stabilize farming, but it can also leak money when the screen is empty or targets drift out of lane. Manual bursts are safer during high-stakes attempts because they let you pause and reassess.
Target lock / focus (if present)
Locking helps you commit, but it also makes it easier to chase. Use lock only after you set a cap. Lock-with-cap is strategy; lock-without-cap is a chase.
Weapons and effects
SlotCatalog tags include ‘Weapons’. In most fishing shooters, weapons are best when multiple targets overlap or when a boss/treasure target is centered. The mistake is firing a weapon because it looks cool while the screen is empty.
Practical check: if you are not sure whether you’re spending quickly, lower the cannon and stop firing for five seconds. In a fishing shooter, pausing is a skill.
Target lanes: where your best shots happen
Lanes are the most overlooked concept in fishing games. Targets usually enter the screen, travel across, and leave. Shooting targets that are entering or exiting often wastes bullets because the target does not stay long enough for consistent hits. Shooting targets that are crossing the center lane increases your hit-rate and reduces the cost per capture.
Why lanes matter
In Paradise 2, like most fishing shooters, targets enter, cross, and exit. Your goal is to shoot when the target gives time for bullets to land. The easiest improvement in any fishing game is to stop firing during exits and focus on center crossings.
A simple lane rule
If the target is leaving the center lane, pause. Wait for the next crossing. This one rule reduces wasted bullets dramatically and makes your caps easier to follow.
How lane discipline changes your results
Two players can use the same cannon and get very different outcomes. The difference is often lane discipline. The player who fires only when targets have screen time usually spends less for the same number of captures.
Lane rule
If the target is leaving the center lane, stop firing. Wait for the next crossing. This rule is simple, but it prevents a large percentage of wasted bullets.
Targets and symbols: the practical band system
Paradise 2 uses a “water world + treasure hunt” theme with creatures like fish, frogs, turtles, sharks, and crocodiles. Instead of memorizing every symbol, classify targets by what they do to your budget. The band system below helps you decide what to shoot, how long to commit, and when to step up.
Band 1 — Farm targets
Examples: Small fish and slow swimmers
Risk: Low. Good for learning and stabilizing pace.
How to play it: Use base cannon. Shoot only when targets cross the center lane. Use short bursts and rotate targets quickly. Your goal is calm, repeatable play.
Band 2 — Value targets
Examples: Medium fish, grouped targets, turtles/frogs when they linger
Risk: Medium. Can become expensive if you chase.
How to play it: Attempt only when the target stays on-screen. Set a cap, then focus. If you step up the cannon, do it for a timer (for example, 10–15 seconds) and reset.
Band 3 — Treasure targets
Examples: Chests, treasure-themed creatures, high-visual targets
Risk: High. These are designed to tempt long chases.
How to play it: Treat treasure like a timed project: cap first, focus fire second, exit immediately when the cap ends or the target drifts to an exit lane.
Band 4 — Boss targets
Examples: Sharks, crocodiles, elite predators
Risk: Very high. Big upside, big burn rate.
How to play it: Use a boss window plan: define a short time window, define cannon level, define cap. During the window, shoot only the boss. When the window ends, you exit even if the boss is still alive.
If you aren’t sure which band a target belongs to, treat it as a higher band until proven otherwise. Take a small, capped attempt and let the result teach you without costing too much.
Weapons and power tools: when to use them
SlotCatalog’s theme tags include weapons. In fishing shooters, weapons are best thought of as “efficiency tools”. They don’t create profit by themselves. They increase the value of a good setup: overlap, dense waves, or a centered premium target.
The mindset: weapons are multipliers on good setups
A weapon is not a replacement for aim or discipline. A weapon is a tool that becomes valuable when the screen is dense, targets overlap, or a premium target is centered. Using a weapon on a poor setup is a fast way to overspend.
When weapons are usually worth it
Use weapons when at least two conditions are true: (1) multiple targets overlap, (2) the target has long on-screen time, (3) you are in a planned window (boss/treasure), or (4) the weapon can reasonably affect more than one payout.
Common weapon mistake
The most expensive mistake is ‘weapon panic’: firing a weapon because something rare appears, even though it’s already exiting. The correct play is to wait for the next high-quality crossing rather than chasing a low-quality one.
A simple weapon discipline rule: if you cannot name what the weapon will hit besides your main target, don’t use it yet. Wait for overlap.
Treasure targets: how to chase value without tunnel vision
Paradise 2 is built to feel like a treasure hunt. That’s a good thing for entertainment, but it also creates a trap: tunnel vision. Players see a chest or a “special” target and immediately start spraying bullets at higher cannon. The tutorial approach is the opposite: tighten the cap and improve focus.
Treasure is designed to create tunnel vision
Paradise 2’s theme includes chests and treasures. Treasure targets are exciting because they suggest high payout. The risk is tunnel vision: you stop thinking about lanes, caps, and pace and you just hold the trigger.
How to shoot treasure safely
Make treasure attempts shorter than normal. Choose a strict cap, focus fire only while the target is central, and exit quickly if it drifts. It’s better to miss three treasure attempts cheaply than to win one by overspending.
A simple two-step decision
Before firing: (1) is it central, and (2) do I know my cap? If either answer is ‘no’, don’t shoot yet.
Treasure rule of thumb
Treasure attempts should be shorter than boss attempts. If you let treasure become a long chase, it will eat the session. Cap, focus, exit. Then return to farm play.
Boss windows: the correct way to chase x1000 potential
SlotCatalog lists Paradise 2 with a max win of x1000. In fishing shooters, the biggest swings usually happen around premium targets: bosses, elite predators, or event-style moments. The mistake is trying to force a premium outcome by shooting bosses endlessly. The correct approach is to schedule boss windows.
Boss windows turn chaos into a plan
Bosses are where Paradise 2 can feel thrilling. They’re also where sessions can spiral. The fix is to turn boss play into windows: a short, controlled attempt with a defined start and end.
The three boss rules
Rule 1: enter with a cap. Rule 2: focus the boss only. Rule 3: exit at cap, no exceptions. These rules keep boss play fun without turning it into a chase.
Positioning beats emotion
If a boss drifts to an exit lane, stop firing and wait. Bosses leaving the screen are low-efficiency targets. Your goal is not to shoot constantly; it’s to shoot when bullets have time to land.
Boss discipline
A boss window should feel boring when you describe it: you pick the cap, you focus, and you exit. That “boring” structure is what makes bosses playable long-term.
RTP and variance: how to interpret 96% in a shooter
SlotCatalog lists Paradise 2 RTP as 96%. RTP is a long-run expectation, not a promise for any single session. In a fishing shooter, variance can feel extreme because you can spend faster than a reel slot: your trigger finger controls pace.
The most important consequence is simple: your decisions determine whether the RTP concept even has time to matter. If you play at a high cannon and fire constantly, you are compressing a lot of variance into a short time. If you play with caps, lane discipline, and scheduled windows, you slow down the variance and make the session feel more stable.
Responsible play reminder
Gambling should be entertainment. Set time and budget limits. If you feel the urge to chase losses, stop the session. No guide can override emotional play.
Tips and tricks: repeatable habits that improve results
These tips are written to be repeatable. If a tip requires “perfect instinct”, it’s not a good strategy. Good Paradise 2 play is a small set of habits: lane discipline, caps, paced firing, and short premium attempts.
Use a base cannon and treat step-ups as timed tools
Your base cannon handles most of the game. Step up only in planned windows (boss/treasure/cluster), and step down as soon as the window ends.
Make caps your default language
A cap gives you an automatic exit. Decide caps before you lock or focus targets. If you decide caps mid-chase, you will expand the budget.
Shoot the center lane; pause on exits
Center lane equals screen time. Exit lane equals wasted bullets. Make this your simplest habit.
Fire in bursts
Bursts prevent accidental overspending, make it easier to re-aim, and help you track your pace. Continuous fire is how caps get ignored.
Treat treasure like a short project
Treasure targets are tempting. Use the shortest caps you can tolerate and exit quickly if conditions degrade.
Use weapons on overlap, not on emptiness
Weapons are best when they can hit multiple targets or secure a centered premium kill. Save them when the screen is sparse.
Track pace (bullets per minute)
Your cannon level matters, but so does how often you shoot. Two players at the same cannon can spend very differently.
End sessions on time
Set a timer. If you play until you feel done, you’ll usually stop after a chase, not after a clean plan.
If you break the rules twice, stop
A small rule: if you ignore your cap twice in one session, you end the session. This prevents spirals.
Practice in demo like it’s real
Demo is for habit training, not for max-cannon chaos. Practice exits, caps, and lane discipline.
The fastest improvement for most players is not learning new targets; it’s learning when to stop shooting. Pauses create high-quality shots.
Session templates
Templates help you avoid drifting into random high-cannon play. Pick one template and follow it completely before mixing strategies.
Beginner control session
Duration
15–20 minutes
Goal
Learn lanes + caps
Base cannon only. Shoot farm targets that cross center. Use a time cap (10–20 seconds). Avoid treasure and bosses entirely. The win is control, not profit.
Treasure practice session
Duration
20–30 minutes
Goal
Train tunnel-vision resistance
Farm normally, then take 2–3 treasure attempts only when targets are centered. Tight caps. No chasing into exit lanes. Reset to farm after each attempt.
Boss window micro-session
Duration
10–15 minutes
Goal
Boss discipline
Warm up first. Schedule one boss window (30–90 seconds). Focus boss only. Exit at cap. If the boss exits early, you do not extend the window.
Low-drama entertainment session
Duration
30–45 minutes
Goal
Stay steady
Never exceed base cannon. Rotate targets quickly. Prefer lanes and screen time over rarity. Use weapons only on overlap.
Mistakes that cost money (and how to fix them)
High cannon without a plan
Increasing cannon because you feel bored is the fastest way to spend too much. Step up only for planned windows.
Chasing exit-lane targets
When targets leave the screen, hit-rate drops and bullets are wasted. Pause and wait for center crossings.
Locking a target without a cap
Locking commits you emotionally. Without a cap, the chase can become endless. Lock only after you set the budget.
Weapon panic
Firing weapons on bad setups is expensive. Use weapons on overlap or centered premium targets.
Treasure tunnel vision
Treasure targets are designed to tempt long chases. Tight caps and quick exits keep treasure fun.
Playing without a timer
Without a session timer, most people stop only after a chase. Timers create clean endings.
If you want one universal fix: slow down. Slower pace gives you time to re-aim, notice exits, and remember your cap.
Myths (beliefs that create bad sessions)
‘If I keep shooting, it must drop’
Truth: Targets can resist longer than your budget. Outcomes are not guaranteed within a personal spend limit.
Fix: Use caps and rotate. Rotation is correct play.
‘Bigger cannon equals bigger profit’
Truth: Bigger cannon equals bigger burn rate. Without a premium setup, you simply spend faster.
Fix: Step up only during planned boss/treasure windows, then return to base.
‘Treasure is always worth it’
Truth: Treasure targets can be high variance and expensive.
Fix: Make treasure attempts shorter than normal, with strict caps and lane rules.
‘Weapons will save a bad chase’
Truth: Weapons amplify good setups; they rarely rescue bad ones.
Fix: Save weapons for overlap and centered premium moments.
‘I can win it back by raising cannon’
Truth: Chasing by raising cannon is a classic tilt pattern that usually accelerates losses.
Fix: Reset to base cannon and end the session on time if you feel chase urges.
Paradise 2 is best enjoyed as entertainment with structure. Structure keeps it fun.
Play demo vs play real
Demo play is the best place to practice lane discipline, caps, and clean exits. SlotCatalog provides a demo section and an “Integrate demo game” snippet for Paradise 2. This page embeds the playable demo widget and also provides a direct demo link.
Playable demo
Paradise 2 demo widget
If the demo is restricted on some networks/regions, the widget may not load. In that case, use the “Play Demo” link to open SlotCatalog directly.
Widget status
Loading
Source: SlotCatalog “Integrate demo game” snippet (FreeDemo widget). This page embeds it for convenience.
How to use demo correctly
Demo is for habit training. Pick a base cannon, practice center-lane shots, and follow caps. The most important demo skill is exiting correctly. If you can exit correctly in demo, you can exit correctly in real play.
Video
SlotCatalog hosts a “Video and Image gallery” section for Paradise 2. If you want more screenshots and any available video beyond what we saved locally, open SlotCatalog and scroll to the gallery.
If you want a specific video embedded directly on this page (for example a YouTube embed), share the exact embeddable URL and we can add it without guessing.
FAQs
Is Paradise 2 available on 6 Club?
Yes. Paradise 2 appears under Our Games → Fishing on 6 Club. Availability can vary by region/platform, but the route and tile exist.
Is Paradise 2 a slot or a shooting game?
It’s a fishing shooter (arcade shooting game). It uses casino-style wagering, but gameplay is interactive: you aim and shoot targets to capture prizes.
What is the RTP of Paradise 2?
SlotCatalog lists Paradise 2 RTP as 96%. RTP is a long-run metric; short sessions can vary significantly.
What is the max win in Paradise 2?
SlotCatalog lists max win up to x1000. Big outcomes usually come from planned premium attempts (boss/treasure), not nonstop high-cannon firing.
What is the bet range?
SlotCatalog lists min bet 0.1 and max bet 100 (currency equivalent). Casinos can map these to local currency units.
How do I stop overspending?
Use three guardrails: a timer, a base cannon level, and a cap per target. These three controls prevent most tilt patterns.
Do weapons cost more than bullets?
Often, yes. Many fishing shooters price weapons as a multiple of your current cannon cost. Treat weapons as tools for overlap or planned premium attempts.
How should beginners approach treasure targets?
Make treasure attempts short. Only shoot when the target is centered, set a strict cap, and exit immediately when the cap ends or the target drifts to an exit lane.
What’s a safe approach to bosses?
Use boss windows: define a short time window, define cannon level, define cap. Focus boss only and exit at cap.
Is there a free demo version?
Yes. SlotCatalog provides a demo section for Paradise 2 and an “Integrate demo game” snippet. This page embeds the demo widget and also provides an external demo link.
Images and visuals
Below are original SVG diagrams made for this guide and selected screenshots from SlotCatalog’s gallery saved locally into the site’s public folder.




Ready to play?
Play Paradise 2 with a base cannon, lane discipline, and strict caps. Treat treasure and bosses as windows, not as chases.