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The Famicom version was also available packaged with a plastic, western-style revolver accessory (modeled after the Colt Single Action Army) that can be used instead of the Zapper. The Famicom version for use with the Zapper gun peripheral was released in Japan the same year, and in the United States on the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1985. This version was also published on the Pla圜hoice-10 arcade system. A piece of Frédéric Chopin's " Funeral march" indicates the player's defeat.

It features a shooting gallery where opponents are to be shot from the windows of a saloon. In the NES version, the player waits for the opponent's eyes to flash (accompanied by a speech bubble reading "FIRE!!") before shooting. Screenshot showing typical gameplay of Wild Gunman for the NESĪn updated video game version of the game, replacing photographic images with cartoon-style video game sprites, was released for Famicom in 1984 and the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1985. The second version has a plastic gunman figure mounted on top of a plastic battery box called Custom Gunman, which later became one of the microgames in the Game Boy Advance title, WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgames!. A victorious player faces off against several more gunslinger opponents. If the player is fast enough, the projection changes to that of the shot gunman falling down otherwise it shows the gunman drawing and firing his gun. When this enemy character's eyes flash, the player draws and fires the gun. Full-motion video footage of an American Wild West gunslinger is projected onto the screen. It consists of a light gun connected to a 16 mm projection screen. The original version of Wild Gunman is one of Nintendo's electro-mechanical arcade games created by Gunpei Yokoi and released in 1974.
