Yes he does. Guppies mostly.Hopefully your friend raises his own.
Frozen mysis, frozen bloodworms, crushed northfin carnivore pellets, Bug Bites, and New Life Spectrum flakes was my plan until my friend takes him in, which he does more live foods for his.
I keep mostly small fish, exception of hoplos, a common pleco, and goldfish. A large cichlid is definitely new ground for me, but I am not planning to keep him, a home is lined up. My only large tank is not suitable for an Oscar lol
Diet should be alright for the short time I've got him, yes?


One of my local fish shops got some astronotus crassipinis (astronotus oscillatus are red tigers) in and they look even more weird as juveniles as they have the same patterning but are proper dark brown and white rather than brown and yellowy. I always think Oscars look much better young than they do old but that's a matter of opinion.I don't know oscars well, usually tigers I've seen are black and red not brown and white, thats what's thrown me off haha
What are the odds he is astronotus crassipinis? He definitely resembles some of the baby photos of those too. I'll see how he looks today more coloured up, but he's definitely more a brown white/yellow to me than red thus far.One of my local fish shops got some astronotus crassipinis (astronotus oscillatus are red tigers) in and they look even more weird as juveniles as they have the same patterning but are proper dark brown and white rather than brown and yellowy. I always think Oscars look much better young than they do old but that's a matter of opinion.
I doubt it just because they are rather rare. A store would likely sell one as such.What are the odds he is astronotus crassipinis? He definitely resembles some of the baby photos of those too. I'll see how he looks today more coloured up, but he's definitely more a brown white/yellow to me than red thus far.
Right? That's actually what I first thought he was.Juvenile oscars kind of look like African bush fishes (ctenopoma)