Reviews from

in the past


the dog taught me about the inevitability of haters

Played it on sega, and I didn't really like it, but I believe it was interesting at the time it came out

My friend Eric bet me that he could beat me in the clay pigeons mode. He kept cheating and getting closer to the screen but when I called him on it he was like "No, I'm just aiming, I'm just aiming!" and I was like, I'm not an idiot, Eric, you're not fooling anyone. So I started doing the same thing, but then he told his Mom that I was the one cheating! And then Eric's Mom said Eric can put the Zapper closer because he has longer arms, it's like a basketball player being taller than other players. So we played with Eric cheating and I won anyways and he kept saying stuff like "well I'd rather lose Duck Hunt than not have a Dad" and "I bet you just play Duck Hunt your whole life, that's why you have no Dad" and I'm confused because my Dad's at home and he's fine. Eric's current relationship status is Divorced.

um dos jogos mais chatos que eu já joguei no Dynavision, só zerei pra ver o final mesmo

I am one of the few nowadays who was able to play this on a CRT.
Its not really worth it.


I used to play this at the babysitter's while her and her boyfriend got busy on the bed behind me.

I used to play this on those cartridge thingie. No idea what they were called but oml I remember tryn' my best shooting the ducks with the gun back when I was a kid!
I'd hit some and not hit others.
Rated this purely for nostalgia more than anything else...

The light gun is fun, but unfortunately you can’t play it on modern hardware. If you still got an old CRT, have fun letting the bullets fly!

Interesting minigame. Makes great use of the NES Zapper.

This is one of the first games that amazed as a child, mainly because of the technology behind it. It showed me what gaming could be. The gameplay is quite simple, but very fun. It's one of those classic games we can still play nowadays and have fun, but its arcady nature makes it so it's hard to play for more than a dozen minutes.

This works surprisingly well with mouse controls, and it's not exactly easy despite the greater precision.

If you don't like this game, it's because you never learned how to use the sights.

Smash Bros character is cute but outside of the cool visuals for Game C this is easily the worst black box light gun game. Very boring and without the challenge you'd see in a Hogan's Alley let alone a Gumshoe.

A true classic, fun gameplay, fun peripheral use. Which felt mindblowing at the time...still does hehe. I estimiate this to be my first game ever, period. If not this, it was Super Mario Bros...but either way, not much that needs to be said, a good old classic.

bah c'était mon premier jeu bravo les fusils etc ah non merde pas ça

I do indeed have this, on original hardware, and can confirm, it's neat!

It was neat for its time, but I’m glad game systems left the light guns in the past.
It’s not even bad, it’s just so basic. And you can’t shoot the damn dog for laughing at you. This game needs to be modded to allow just that

Aos brasileiros lendo isso... Eu sei que você jogou isso no polystation que nem eu <3

Simple lightgun game that feels less like a game and more like a toy. Feels like the first draft of a mobile phone game now. The big sprites, the background, and the economic animation gives the game a lot more personality than you typically see in NES games. My main in Smash Ultimate.

Los videojuegos surgieron con un único propósito: entretenernos.

I liked playing it cause I had the game gun but other than that annoying ass game, wanted to punch that dog laughing at me.

neat novelty but gets old quick


~ Juegos que Hay que Jugar Antes de Morir ~

Juego 74: Duck Hunt (1984)

Qué gustazo. Un buen juego de feria, pero con violencia animal, aunque ojalá hubiera más. Cada vez que el perro se ríe de mí, la ira me consume.

Sería todavía más divertido jugarlo en un arcade real, la verdad.

It's OK for about 46 seconds.

I respect the history behind Duck Hunt. How the earlier projector-based versions of the game reflects some of Nintendo's first experiments with releasing interactive electronic games and selling that to consumers. The inherently videogamey qualities, like music and animation, lend the game so much charm. That said, it's basically something you'd try on Wii Play for five minutes and never think of again your entire life.

Duck Hunt has three game modes. Game A features one duck at a time, and you can fire three shots before they fly away. B features two ducks at a time. This is all pretty easy. The ducks are pretty large and fly in straight lines until they bounce off the side of the screen. There's no end until you mess up too many shots, and if you're decent at lightgun games, it could be well over half an hour before you see a Game Over. The Zapper is a nice gun that carries much of the visual style of the early NES stuff, and there's a satisfying heft to each pull of the trigger, though I'm thinking of opening mine up and spraying some WD40 on the 35-year-old internal spring mechanism that reverberates with each shot.

Game C is both more interesting, and less interesting. The cartoon Duck Hunt Duo are gone, and it doesn't carry as much charm, but the gameplay's a tad more intricate. This is clay pigeon shooting. A beep is sounded, and two targets are flung through the air. You have three shots to hit both of them, and they become harder to hit the longer you wait. I find they're easiest to hit at the peak of their arc through the air, steadying themselves for a second. It's easily the biggest challenge in the game, and I frequently found myself using the Zapper's sights to line up my third shot, but it's still a little too simplistic to compete with 90s lightgun action. I went through 18 rounds of Game C without really trying. It's more of an endurance test than a test of skill. Play long enough, and you naturally start trying stupid trick shots, firing from the hip and spinning around before taking your shot. I suppose this game could serve as good practice for someone who hopes to become incredibly cool.

There's reasons to like Duck Hunt. It can work particularly well if you're taking turns with another player. The iconography is definitely likeable, and they did a great job of fleshing that all out in Super Smash Bros for Wii U. I like the ducks, I like the dog, I like that I can pretend that they're just playing along with me and nobody's actually getting killed. It's just too static and plain too really hold your attention for long. Even alongside the bulk of the early NES library, it's disappointingly simple. Any of Time Crisis 2's minigames hold more depth and excitement.

It's natural for NES-owning lightgun fans to want a Zapper and Duck Hunt. They're a crucial part of the genre's history. Just don't expect too much from it if you actually go through with it, though. I'm still trying to distract myself from the fact I spent £40 on a boxed copy.

Retro Yearly List #10 [1984: Duck Hunt]

Well, you know, you shoot ducks, and an annoying dog will laugh at you if you fail, the game is endless and point-based. You can choose either standard mode with 1 duck at a time or 2 of them, or clay shooting mode which is a bit easier. That's it. Besides all simplicity, it's a classic, that's a game that normally would become an obscure random game due to the unusual NES Zapper technology being the focal point, so is impressive that it survived the time test and is so well remembered to the point of making it into Smash. Well done.