Talk:Qwak!
Qwak! has been listed as one of the Video games good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it. Review: September 10, 2017. (Reviewed version). |
First duck-hunting game?
[edit]Is this possibly the first known duck hunting game? It seems like it has to be, given the release date. Granted, it could be really difficult to find a reliable source for that claim, and without a reliable source, we can't put it in the article. AmericanLemming (talk) 12:34, 10 September 2017 (UTC)
- @AmericanLemming: Well, it would depend on how you defined it (and yeah, no sources) - it's probably the first duck hunting video game- there were only a couple light gun video games before it, and I've never seen anything about a duck hunting computer game from before 1974 (nor did the Magnavox Odyssey have a duck hunting game). But electronic light gun games had been around since 1936, and while they're poorly documented at best, it seems... likely that at least one was duck hunting-related? Impossible to prove, though. --PresN 13:16, 10 September 2017 (UTC)
Seeburg Ray-O-Lite
[edit]I did a little research, and it turns out, ironically enough, that the very first electronic light gun game was a duck hunting game, Seeburg Ray-O-Lite. See Guinness World Records: First light-gun game.
I also found this article on Mental Floss titled "How Did the Duck Hunt Gun Work?". While it's mostly about Nintendo's Duck Hunt, it also includes a short paragraph about "Ray-O-LIte": "The Zapper’s ancestry goes back to the mid 1930s, when the first so-called “light guns” appeared after the development of light-sensing vacuum tubes. In the first light gun game, Ray-O-Lite (developed in 1936 by Seeburg, a company that made parts and systems for jukeboxes), players shot at small moving targets mounted with light sensors using a gun that emitted a beam of light. When the beam struck a sensor, the targets – ducks, coincidentally – registered the “hit” and a point was scored." The article also includes a link to a page with some nice pictures of a surviving Ray-O-Lite machine: http://www.pinrepair.com/arcade/rayolit.htm AmericanLemming (talk) 03:39, 14 September 2017 (UTC)