Mmmmm Ninty. That means another Nintendo cab. I picked up a Nintendo VS. Duck Hunt from Craigslist for a very good price.
There is a known sound issue and the gun has problems registering. However the game comes on and the picture is rock solid and colorful.
First thing I do is an audio board cap kit and replace the sound potentiometer. Great, now we have working sound. Next I turn my attention
to the light gun. No matter how much I tweak the monitor I cannot get the gun to register everytime. I works sometimes, but not all the time.
I then turn my attention to picking up a used, working arcade light gun. Unfortunately this was not as easy as it sounds, as most 25 year old light guns
are broken and working ones fetch quite a high price. Hmmmm. I decide to invest in a cheap Nintendo NES zapper light gun. These
things were made by the millions. I bought one off ebay for $6.10. I take the zapper gun apart and wire it up to the game.
Click here to read about the Nintendo Zapper Light Gun
Mod tutorial. I manage to fix the arcade light gun using parts from the NES
zapper. Good thing, I now have a completely working game.
In the process of working on the game, I notice that there was a sheet on the back door that says this game was originally a Vs. Hogans Alley. Hogans
Alley is a more interesting game, and a lot more fun to play. I decide that I am going to change it back. I purchase an official Nintendo Vs Hogans Alley
Game Pak in the original black case from a fellow collector for a relatively low price. I convert the game back by replacing game ROMs and the title marquee.
Both games were gun games, so the conversion is rather painless, especially since I have already repaired the sound and light gun.
Over the course of time I have found out that there is a rare and wildly popular Nintendo gun game called Gumshoe.
This was available on the NES home entertainment system which everyone knows and loves. However the arcade version was very scarce.
You are a detective trying to collect diamonds to pay a ransom for your kidnapped girlfriend. Along the way you have to shoot enemies to
clear the path and shoot the detective guy to make him jump over obstacles. Anyways, I was on the hunt for one of these and found a new old
stock kit for sale on ebay. I won the auction, I now I own the kit. Everything is in mint condition.
So I put the VS Gumshoe game in my Nintendo VS Unisystem and took out the VS Hogans Alley. Mainly I needed to test to make sure my new kit
worked properly, but it turns out that this game is ultra fun. I most certainly am going to leave it as it is, a rare gun game that is loads
of fun to play, how can you go wrong? Hopefully as time goes on, I will get another VS Unisystem or basic Nintendo cabinet and then I can put
the VS Hogans Alley game in that one. That would awesome, to have both gun games side by side. Until then, Gumshoe it is.
When finished, the Vs. Gumshoe is now officially part of the herd in the Vintage Vault Arcade and Gameroom. It is the 6th Nintendo game that I own, along
with Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong Jr., Donkey Kong 3, Mario Bros and Popeye. It is also the first gun game to grace the gameroom. I'm pretty happy with the final
product, and find myself daily trying to beat my crackshot record shooting down those bad guys. Nintendo Rocks!
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