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Duck Hunt

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Duck Hunt
Screenshot of Duck Hunt.
Screenshot of Duck Hunt.
Developer(s)Intelligent Systems
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Platform(s)Famicom/NES/Arcade
Release1985
Genre(s)Arcade/First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single player

Duck Hunt is a first-person shooter video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) game console system. It was one of the two original pack-in titles for the first release of the game system (the other was Super Mario Bros.).

Gameplay

In Duck Hunt, players had a special gun apparatus, the Nintendo Zapper Gun that they plugged into the NES console, and attempted to shoot down ducks or clay pigeons in mid-flight. Duck Hunt was originally released as an arcade game in 1984 and was also included in the PlayChoice-10 arcade console. Like many early video games, Duck Hunt has no ending.

File:Duck hunt arcade.png
The popular dog can be shot in Vs. Duck Hunt.

The player is also accompanied by a nameless dog that laughs whenever a duck is missed. The dog has passed into video gaming folklore. Additionally, one of the more popular urban legends within the video game community claims that some players have found a way to shoot the dog. This is actually impossible for several gameplay reasons and limitations, although it is possible to shoot the dog in the bonus round of the arcade version of the game, Vs. Duck Hunt (possibly the origin of the urban legend). There is also a fan-made Macromedia Flash remake of the game that features the ability to shoot the dog. [1]

The game had three modes: one and two-duck variations on the above formula and a third clay pigeon shooting mode. Most players regard this last mode as by far the most difficult; the clay pigeons were much smaller sprites than the ducks. Additionally, in later rounds shooting multiple clays required faster reaction time than as in the same numbered round in the duck modes.

The skeet shoot mode appeared only as a bonus game in Vs. Duck Hunt.

Packaging

The game was placed in two combination cartridges. If one bought the original Action Set configuration of the NES in the late 1980s, Duck Hunt was included with Super Mario Bros.. This particular cartridge is the most commonly found NES cartridge in the United States. If one had purchased the NES system in a bundle with the Power Pad, then Duck Hunt was included on a 3-in-1 cartridge that additionally included World Class Track Meet. Duck Hunt was available in a standard single cartridge form, but it is very rare (yet not that valuable).

Trivia

  • While marketed as a single player game, the second player controller could be used to direct the duck, though it was tricky to master. Many people believe that this is a glitch, but the instruction booklet packaged with the game shows this as a feature.
  • The player could not control the ducks in "Two Duck" and the "Trap Shooting" modes.
  • The music was composed by Hirokazu "Hip" Tanaka.
  • On Comedy Central's Daily Show with Jon Stewart, this game was used as a "digital simulation" of a duck-hunting trip between Donald Rumsfeld and Justice Anton Scalia. Also mentioned in the FCC Song.

Appearances in other video games

See also