The Hyper Blaster and the GunCon were mutually incompatible, although some games, such as Elemental Gearbolt, supported both peripherals. Project Horned Owl, a gun-shooting game published by Sony Computer Entertainment, was the first title to support it. The Hyper Blaster was also the first light gun for the PlayStation, preceding the release of Namco's GunCon by a few years. The PlayStation version of the lightgun (Sony ID: SLEH-00005, SLUH-00017), sold as the Hyper Blaster in Japan and Europe, is colored green (with the Japanese model being black) and only works in the first controller slot on the original design of the PlayStation 2. It was a deliberately simple and humorous cover, with strong design tones over creative artistic ones, whilst sporting an excellent colour palette. Konami opted to design its own light gun for the console versions of Lethal Enforcers, instead of using the first-party Super Scope and Menacer light guns, in order to provide a more accurate experience of the arcade game at home. It’s box art by artist Takeshi Ugajin would compliment the game’s carefree weirdness and abstract playfulness perfectly. The pink Justifier was only available directly from Konami via mail-order and is compatible with both the Super NES and Genesis models of the blue gun through a 6-pin RJ-11 phone cord. Optionally, a pink Justifier can be daisy chained into the blue gun for use by a second player. The blue Justifier gun connects directly to the console. The Genesis and Super NES versions of the Justifier light gun were modeled after the revolver-shaped light gun controllers used in the original Lethal Enforcers arcade cabinet.
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