
Super Nintendo Zombies At My Neighbors CIB
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Zombies Ate My Neighbors on SNES is a complete-in-box copy of the 1993 LucasArts and Konami co-production, one of the most talked-about run-and-gun titles the 16-bit generation produced. The box art alone earns its reputation: a screaming woman in pink, zombies clawing out of a red vortex, massive green horror lettering dripping down the front panel like something lifted straight from a B-movie video rental shelf. CIB copies hold together at every layer. Box and cartridge come first. The manual is the third piece.
LucasArts in 1993 was not yet synonymous with Star Wars licensing. That year the company was deep into its adventure-game golden run, with "Day of the Tentacle" arriving alongside "Sam and Max Hit the Road" in the same calendar year. Zombies was the outlier, the genre detour that turned out to be the title a generation remembers most fondly. Konami handled the console port side and the game shipped on SNES and Genesis simultaneously. The SNES version carried Mode 7 scaling tricks that the hardware could actually use. Sixteen playable levels, top-down perspective, cheerleader zombies, chainsaw maniacs, werewolves, a fire extinguisher as a weapon. The humor was deadpan B-movie, the difficulty was punishing, and the two-player co-op kept rental copies in heavy rotation at every Blockbuster from 1993 onward. Thirty-three years out, CIB copies are the version collectors go after because the box art is half the reason anyone remembers it.
Fifty-five levels of triage: save the neighbors or watch the body count rise.
This copy is complete with the original cart and manual inside the box. The box structure is worth a close look before anything else: corners and flap integrity tell you what kind of storage life this one had. Back-panel print clarity confirms the same. The cartridge label should show the LucasArts logo and the Nintendo seal of quality without significant peeling at the edges. The manual, if present, carries the full monster roster in color. Set it on a shelf and the front-panel art does the rest of the work. Run your thumb along the bottom edge of the box flap seam and check whether the cardboard tab is still seated clean.
OWNER VERIFY: Confirm complete-in-box status: box, cartridge, and manual all present and matching.
Fifty-five levels of triage: save the neighbors or watch the body count rise.
The Nintendo Archive
This is part of Nintendo's 90s run, the era that built the shop's back wall. Nintendo shipped cartridges, plush, promotional oddities, and packaging that most buyers threw out on the way to the game. What survived, mostly by accident, ends up here. Every piece is cleaned, photographed, and listed one at a time. Nothing on the archive shelf is a duplicate.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This super nintendo zombies at my neighbors cib originates from the 90s era[01], represents Nintendo[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- Nintendo
- ERA
- 90s
Best shop in Vegas.
14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.
Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.
707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.














