Duck Hunt

1976

Prior to the NES version, Nintendo also made a Duck Hunt game based on the Laser Clay Shooting System released in 1976. Beginning with the nationwide roll-out of the NES in 1986, Duck Hunt was one of several titles Nintendo included as a pack-in game with some of its releases.

If the player shoots the dog, the bonus stage immediately ends. ==Development== Duck Hunt is based on a 1976 electronic toy version titled Beam Gun: Duck Hunt, part of the Beam Gun series.

1980

In the Action Set configuration of the NES in the late 1980s, Duck Hunt was included with Super Mario Bros.

1984

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, followed by an arcade game port released for the Nintendo Vs.

series in 1984 as Vs.

1985

System in North America in April 1985.

It was then 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.

System was the third top-grossing arcade software on the RePlay arcade charts in November 1985, below Vs.

1986

Prior to the NES version, Nintendo also made a Duck Hunt game based on the Laser Clay Shooting System released in 1976. Beginning with the nationwide roll-out of the NES in 1986, Duck Hunt was one of several titles Nintendo included as a pack-in game with some of its releases.

2014

The game was released as a Virtual Console title for the Wii U in 2014. ==Gameplay== Duck Hunt is a shooter game in which the objective is to shoot moving targets on the television screen in mid-flight.

A Power Set was also available, which included the Action Set, the Power Pad and a 3-in-1 cartridge that included Duck Hunt, World Class Track Meet, and Super Mario Bros. Duck Hunt was re-released as a downloaded Virtual Console title for the Wii U console in Japan on December 24, 2014, and internationally on December 25.

In Wii Play (2006) and its sequel Motion (2011) some elements from Duck Hunt and Hogan's Alley are included in the mini-games "Shooting Range" and "Trigger Twist" in which some of the various targets are ducks and cans. In the 2014 fighting games Super Smash Bros.

2015

Ultimate, and the team is featured in the June 2019 trailer announcing Banjo and Kazooie as downloadable content for Ultimate. In the 2015 film Pixels, the dog has a cameo appearance, where it is given as a "trophy" by the aliens when Sam Brenner (Adam Sandler) and Ludlow Lamonsoff (Josh Gad) defeat the creatures of the video game Centipede in London.

2019

Ultimate, and the team is featured in the June 2019 trailer announcing Banjo and Kazooie as downloadable content for Ultimate. In the 2015 film Pixels, the dog has a cameo appearance, where it is given as a "trophy" by the aliens when Sam Brenner (Adam Sandler) and Ludlow Lamonsoff (Josh Gad) defeat the creatures of the video game Centipede in London.




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