top | item 35139161

How the Duck Hunt Gun Worked

13 points| akshaybhalotia | 3 years ago |slashgear.com | reply

7 comments

order
[+] pimlottc|3 years ago|reply
It's a bit absurd to have an article about this and not include any screenshots of the actual white blocks used by the lightgun to detect targets. This is a better explanation with visuals; it actually used two screens to do the detection:

https://www.scienceabc.com/innovation/how-did-the-nintendo-g...

[+] nicklevin|3 years ago|reply
Simply a great example of using engineering and inventiveness to solve the problem they had. I remember noticing the screen having a flash, but because it coincided with the 'bang!' noise it felt natural.
[+] haskellandchill|3 years ago|reply
so could it easily be tricked by putting a finger over it and quickly removing it in front of a light? or it's too small of a window to trick? a strobe light could fool it?
[+] Doxin|3 years ago|reply
There's a timing element to it too. Because CRTs display pixels from top to bottom the timing gives information about the exact location of the hit too, not just a boolean hit/miss.
[+] devilbunny|3 years ago|reply
Have to detect a frame of black before detecting a flash of white. And the white has to be detected on the right raster lines. It's not trivial to fake.