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Today Megabass still embodies that daring spirit. Each product, manufactured in small-batches and finished by hand in Japan, is a painstaking marriage of handmade form and technological innovation. Megabass strives to capture the same care, quality, and attention to detail embodied by the handmade tradition. In a modern age dominated by CAD and mass production, every Megabass lure is based on a hand-carved Yuki Ito original. Each stage of the development process is closely monitored with strict quality controls to ensure that the mechanical process of production does not lose sight of the integrity of the original.
Towards this end, Megabass strives for the concept of “tackle integration”. Coined by Yuki Ito himself, this term expresses the idea that design must not lose sight of the human. Our hands often mediate our experience of the physical world; therefore, the same hands should shape and ultimately give birth to the objects that inhabit our world. So often mass-produced goods come to us stamped out of a computer model, largely conceived, designed, and produced without having a chance to evolve through sustained human contact.
The wooden grips that grace the ARMS rod series are a perfect example of Megabass’ “tackle integration”: while machines play a part in the carving process, the initial design is the result of human contact. The tactile experience of daily use and experimentation is preserved through strict production controls and reaffirmed by hand sanding and finishing. The wooden ARMS grips, like all of Yuki Ito’s designs, embody not only a deep passion for fishing, but also an effort to maintain a standard of quality too often missing in today's companies.
Little has changed since Megabass’ birth in a garage in 1985 at the hands and ideals of Yuki Ito. Today Megabass continues this tradition of innovation, quality, and custom handicraft, never losing sight of the angler’s hands for which each Megabass® product is painstakingly made.