Re: Damn! Bass Boats are Fast!
I had never heard of a "fisn'n'ski" as a boat type until joining here a few years ago, and was surprised to learn my family has had one since 1988. I don't think it is a specific-enough term (as opposed to bass boat or center console) to be useful. I'd describe mine as a dual console on a bay boat hull. All fiberglass; no carpet or built-in upholstery (but snap-in cushions and back rests). And it has an outboard.
Boat types (small recreational) are defined by two features: the hull shape and the interior lay-out. But the manufacturers mix them around--for example my key west DC was also sold with a center console. Center consoles appear on bay boats, flats boats, scows, skiffs, jons, tri-hulls (eg whaler although it's not a true tri -hull), deep v's, modified V's, cats and Chincoteague scows, so you really don't know by that term alone.
There are the ski boats like mastercraft which are a specialty design--maybe that's what the OP is thinking about, since they have inboards (I/O?). A bass boat is another specialty, almost always OB. But often its hull is similar to a whaler or other cathedral hull; it's the interior that makes it what it is. A pontoon is a pontoon no matter how it's rigged.
A "dual console" is also a confusing term b/c like a bow rider it has 2 consoles and bow seating. Was my 1969 starcraft a bow rider or a dual console? Does it have to have the deep v and bow flare and self-bailing deck to qualify?
So when considering options or looking for recommendations, be sure the speaker and listener are talking about the same thing. On one level, apples and oranges are the same.