Toronto doesn’t disappoint
You don’t necessarily flock to a video game convention expecting to see fish, but if someone makes the offhand suggestion to hit up a nearby aquarium and the pitch has time to simmer, before you know it, you’re committed to spending $35 per person to see some real good fish (but not an extra $2 between three people to get a brochure with tantalizing fish facts). This week, a few of us at Destructoid found our way to Toronto, home of tasty food, friendly faces, decked-out gaming bars, a certain towering concrete monument that mesmerizes out-of-towners, and the Enthusiast Gaming Live Expo.
When we noticed there was an aquariumright next door to EGLX, Chris, Brett, and I knew we had to drop in before the weekend was up. When I saw it was specificallyRipley’sAquarium of Canada, I had a secret side mission: to also check out some little mummies and various dubious-at-best artifacts.

We saw a lotta cool animals on the excursion and you better believe I found my mummies. Video games and aquatic life? An unexpectedly great pairing. Sometimes silly ideas escalate before you fully think them through and you just have to roll with ’em. With that in mind, here are Destructoid’s favorite fish.
It’s fish like these that make me anxious about haphazardly setting foot in the ocean.

We tend to overly assign human characteristics to objects and animals, but c’mon.Look at that face!
No one else really took notice of this fish, but I’d go to bat for it any day of the week.

This outlandish fish right here is why we go to aquariums.
As soon as we saw lobsters, Brett wondered if there was a blue one. Yep,there was a blue one.

Your eyes will be drawn to the Big Boy, but do not neglect the Lil Guy nicely perched nearby.
I wasn’t so sure we’d be able to spot an octopus. Even this side of it was wild to see in person.

The most huggable creature in the whole dang place.
It goes without saying, but kids sure do love these Pixar-popularized species.
One of the best parts of the Toronto aquarium was a winding tunnel that lets you fishgaze to your left, right, and even above you. The layout allowed for some dramatic angles and memorable moments.

You can’t really have an aquarium without seahorses.
Brett did the honors by touching the tingly “electric eel” simulation.
…I don’t think he was amused.
The flamboyant cuttlefish is an all-time great. They’re surprisingly tiny, and while it was hard to capture their beauty inside a tank, they’re so dang precious. I was beyond excited to see them in real life.
Spider-Octopus is my contractually-obligated loosely-related gaming tie-in for this article.
The veritable treasure you’d need to afford aquarium-themed merchandise. Bless the person who came up with the idea of always putting the exit on the other side of the shop so kidshaveto walk through.
Two genuine, bona-fide, electrified ceiling mummies. The boys doubted me, but I knew they existed.

[Disclosure: EGLX is hosted by Destructoid’s parent company Enthusiast Gaming.] [Additional reporting by Brett Makedonski.] [Very good idea to visit an aquarium suggested by Chris Carter.]


