In a 2015 article for
Uproxx, Nathan Birch ranked
Gumshoe as the worst of the NES black box releases, criticizing its game mechanics and its "instant-kill pits", while calling it "one of those lousy Zapper games where you have to protect a dumbass character who trudges forward constantly, oblivious to the dangers around them". In 2023, Garrett Martin of
Paste ranked
Gumshoe fourth on a list of the NES's eighteen Zapper games. Martin called
Gumshoe the "weirdest" and "most fascinating" game on the list but also the most difficult because "it's so hard that most will probably lose interest before finishing the first stage." In 2013, Simon Parkin of
IGN included
Gumshoe on a list of the ten "best, most important, most interesting or most unusual lesser-known" games by famous developers. Parkin noted that
Gumshoe represented
Yoshio Sakamoto's interest in exploring "murky, foreboding scenarios" that contrasted with other Nintendo games. Calling it "one of the most curious genre mash-ups of the era", he wrote that the game's combination of the Zapper with platforming gameplay "demonstrates Sakamoto's restless creativity" and considered the game "an early precursor to the so-called
Endless Runner that has found huge popularity on iOS in recent years". ==References==