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The Exciting Duck Hunt Game- Nintendo Game 1984
Play the Duck Hunt Game Here…
A duck hunt game, wait I thought this was Thanksgiving, what about all the turkeys? Well they aren’t turkeys they’re ducks in this game – so it’s too bad for the ducks. But people need to eat on Thanksgiving, and they usually choose some sort of foul.
This classic game from the 1980s will bring you back to that time. So many kids had this game – and it’s a sad thing in a way because it set veganism back about 100 years. This game sadly taught little kids to want to hunt, but it was a wildly popular game in the 1980s and almost every Nintendo Game System came with this game.
But this is a perfect game for a page on thanksgiving! Whether you plan to eat turkey or duck – lets do a rundown of this game…
The Duck Hunt Game – Summary
Duck Hunt is a 1984 light gun shooter video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) video game console. The game was first released in Japan in April 1984, and was released as a launch game for the NES in North America in October 1985, with it also releasing in Europe two years later.
In Duck Hunt, players use the NES Zapper in combination with a CRT television to shoot ducks that appear on the screen. The ducks appear one or two at a time, and the player is given three shots to shoot them down. The player receives points upon shooting each duck. If the player shoots the required number of ducks in a single round, the player will advance to the next round; otherwise, the player will receive a game over.
The game initially received few reviews, but was given mild critical praise. Prior to the NES version, Nintendo also made a Duck Hunt game based on Laser Clay Shooting System released in 1976. It was later a pack-in game, paired with Super Mario Bros.; the pack later also included World Class Track Meet. The game was released as a Virtual Console title for the Wii U in 2014.
Duck Hunt is a shooter game in which the objective is to shoot moving targets on the television screen in mid-flight. The game is played from a first-person perspective and requires the NES Zapper light gun, which the player aims and fires at the screen. It also requires a CRT television screen since the Zapper gun will not work with LCD or HDTV’s. Each round consists of a total of ten targets to shoot. Depending on the game mode the player selects prior to beginning play, one or two targets will appear on the screen at any given time and the player has three shots, or attempts, to hit them before they disappear.
The player is required to successfully shoot a minimum number of targets in order to advance to the next round; failure will result in a game over. The difficulty increases as the player advances to higher rounds; targets will move faster and the minimum number of targets to shoot will increase. The player receives points upon shooting a target and will also receive bonus points for shooting all ten targets in a single round. Duck Hunt keeps track of the players’ highest score for all games played in a single session; it is lost, however, upon shutting the game off.
Duck Hunt has three different game modes to choose from. In ‘Game A’ and ‘Game B’, the targets are flying ducks in a woodland area, and in ‘Game C’ the targets are clay pigeons that are fired away from the player’s perspective into the distance. In ‘Game A’, one duck will appear on the screen at a time while in ‘Game B’ two ducks will appear at a time.
‘Game A’ allows a second player to control the movement of the flying ducks by using a normal NES controller. The gameplay starts at Round 1 and may continue up to Round 99. If the player completes Round 99, he or she will advance to Round 0, which is a kill screen (in ‘Game A’) where the game behaves erratically, such as targets that move haphazardly or don’t appear at all, and eventually ends.
Follow this Link to Play the Duck Hunt Game…
Duck Hunt (NES) – online game | RetroGames.cz