The iCOTEC Furnado is the lower-cost current iCOTEC caller-and-decoy combo for buyers who want a simple remote-operated setup without paying 320+ money. It gives you 15 sounds, remote control at up to 150 yards, a fur-wrapped body with a furry decoy topper, and a mini tripod.
That makes it easier to place than harder to understand: the Furnado is not the feature-rich step-up model in iCOTEC’s line. It is the budget-minded combo option for buyers who want an electronic predator call with a built-in decoy element and a lighter buy-in.

Quick verdict
If you want the cheapest current iCOTEC caller-and-decoy package and your expectations match that price tier, the Furnado looks like a sensible fit. The manufacturer-backed specs are clear on the essentials: 15 sounds, up to 150-yard remote range, decoy activation from the remote, and a two-year limited warranty.
If you want Bluetooth, a larger sound library, longer remote range, or an external speaker option, this is where the Furnado stops making sense and the iCOTEC 320+ starts to look like the better match.
What the iCOTEC Furnado is
The official product page names it the Furnado Electronic Game Call & Decoy. The manual identifies it as the Furnado Electronic Predator Call/Decoy Combo. Across those sources, the core package is consistent:
- 15 built-in predator sounds
- Remote operation up to 150 yards
- Fur-wrapped caller body
- Furry decoy topper
- Mini tripod
- Remote decoy activation and deactivation
The manual also confirms a backlit remote, volume controls, pause and stop functions, and a battery setup of 4 AA batteries in the caller/decoy unit plus 1 A23 battery in the remote.
What stands out most
1. It fills the low-cost iCOTEC combo slot
This is the biggest reason the Furnado exists. The manufacturer price is listed at $89.99, while the iCOTEC 320+ is listed at $199.99. That price gap is large enough that the Furnado should be judged as an entry-level combo, not as a cheaper version of the 320+ with the same overall capability.
That budget positioning is an inference from the published pricing and feature set, not an official category label from iCOTEC.
2. The feature set is simple, not stripped beyond usefulness
There is enough here for a straightforward predator-calling setup:
- remote control
- integrated decoy element
- 15 sounds
- up to 150-yard range
- two-sound playback, according to the manual
That is a real feature set, even if it is a narrower one than the 320+ offers.
3. The Furnado is current enough to take seriously
There is a live official product page, an active operating manual, and inclusion on iCOTEC’s two-year limited warranty page. That matters because budget models are often the ones buyers worry may be outdated, unsupported, or drifting around on marketplace listings.
Key specs
| Feature | What you get |
|---|---|
| Official name | Furnado Electronic Game Call & Decoy / Furnado Electronic Predator Call/Decoy Combo |
| Sound count | 15 sounds |
| Remote range | Up to 150 yards |
| Remote functions | Backlit remote, volume up/down, pause, stop, decoy activation/deactivation |
| Power | 4 AA in caller/decoy unit, 1 A23 in remote |
| Decoy package | Fur wrap, furry decoy topper, mini tripod |
| Simultaneous playback | Manual says it can play 2 sounds at the same time |
| Warranty | Included under iCOTEC’s two-year limited warranty |
What is not verified cleanly enough to promise
A careful buyer should know where the clear product details stop.
- Bluetooth is not verified for the Furnado. Do not import Plus Series claims into this model.
- No official waterproof or weatherproof rating was verified. There is a general construction claim, but not a clear weather-resistance spec.
- No official speaker output spec or dB figure was verified.
- No official weight was verified.
That does not automatically make the Furnado weak in those areas. It just means those are not safe claims to sell from.
Sound library and the one detail buyers should not miss
The Furnado is consistently described as a 15-sound caller. That part is solid.
What is less tidy is the sound naming. The official web sound list and the manual do not use identical sound names. In practical terms, that means you should treat the sound count as reliable, while treating the exact naming of every file a little more cautiously unless you are looking at the current official list yourself.
For a buyer, that usually matters less than it sounds. The bigger decision is whether 15 total sounds is enough for how you hunt. If you already know you want a broader built-in library, the 320+ is the cleaner fit.

How it compares to the iCOTEC 320+
This is the comparison most shoppers actually need.
Buy the Furnado if:
- you want the lower entry price
- 15 sounds is enough for your use
- up to 150 yards of remote range is enough for your setups
- you want a simpler caller-and-decoy package
- you do not need Bluetooth or verified expansion features
Step up to the 320+ if:
- you want 30 sounds instead of 15
- you want 300-yard remote range instead of 150 yards
- you want Bluetooth, which is officially supported on the 320+
- you want an external speaker port
- you want the AD400 decoy package rather than the Furnado’s simpler fur-wrap/topper approach
The cleanest way to think about it is this: the Furnado is the value play, while the 320+ is the capability play.
Who the Furnado fits best
The Furnado makes the most sense for:
- budget-focused coyote and predator hunters
- buyers who want a current-model iCOTEC combo rather than chasing old listings
- shoppers who value a decoy element but do not need the more developed 320+ package
- hunters who want fewer batteries than a separate caller-plus-decoy setup can require
Who should skip it
You should probably skip the Furnado if any of these are must-haves:
- Bluetooth or app-style control
- more than 15 built-in sounds
- longer remote reach than 150 yards
- an external speaker option
- a more advanced decoy package
- clearly verified weatherproofing
Those buyers are not wrong for wanting more. They are just outside what the Furnado appears designed to be.
Buying advice: manufacturer-first makes the most sense here
The Furnado does have an Amazon route, but marketplace conditions can shift in ways that matter, including seller changes, bundle drift, used-condition contamination, or temporary buy-box inconsistencies.
Because of that, the buying advice here is pretty simple:
- start with the manufacturer listing when you want the cleanest model confirmation
- use Amazon only after confirming the title, seller, condition, and exact model match
That is especially important with lower-cost gear where a wrong-model substitution can erase the value advantage quickly.
Bottom line
The iCOTEC Furnado looks like a legitimate buy for the hunter who wants a simple, current, lower-cost electronic predator caller with a decoy component and does not need premium extras. The direct evidence behind it is good on the basics that matter most: it is current, it has 15 sounds, it works by remote at up to 150 yards, and it carries iCOTEC warranty support.
The main reason to pass is not that it looks bad. It is that the 320+ has clearly verified advantages in sound count, range, Bluetooth, expansion, and decoy package depth. If those matter to you, skip the Furnado and shop the step-up model instead.
If they do not, the Furnado is the iCOTEC model that keeps the buy-in low while still giving you the call-and-decoy combo concept.
