About: Zombies Ate My Neighbors   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/F53DY7fhVqHClWE_2LSx4w==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

"Zombies Ate My Neighbors" is a game for the SNES/Genesis that made an appearance during Eddsworld Halloween Special 2007 during the beginning of the episode when Edd and Tord were playing it. Edd is playing as Zeke and Tord is playing as Julia. The objective is basically to just save your neighbors from being killed by various horror movie monsters. There are 48 levels in it, as well as a credits level and some bonus levels. The game is also referenced in Fun Dead. The Memory Eraser Gun seen in The End is based on the guns from Zombies Ate My Neighbors.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors
rdfs:comment
  • "Zombies Ate My Neighbors" is a game for the SNES/Genesis that made an appearance during Eddsworld Halloween Special 2007 during the beginning of the episode when Edd and Tord were playing it. Edd is playing as Zeke and Tord is playing as Julia. The objective is basically to just save your neighbors from being killed by various horror movie monsters. There are 48 levels in it, as well as a credits level and some bonus levels. The game is also referenced in Fun Dead. The Memory Eraser Gun seen in The End is based on the guns from Zombies Ate My Neighbors.
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors (Zombies in PAL regions) is a video game released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1993. It was released to the North American Wii Virtual Console service the day before Halloween, 2009.
  • This is an upcoming remake of the classic run and gun video game of the same name.
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors is your classic Zombie game created by Lucas Arts and published by Konami. This game is basically a parody of Devil World/Dark Adventure, a previous Konami arcade game, and in turn had a Spiritual Successor in the form of Ghoul Patrol, which was significantly less popular. Also inspired a later game loosely on Greek Mythology called Hercs Adventures as well as the X Box 360 game Monster Madness. A movie based loosely on the game is currently in production. Seriously.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
system2NA
  • 2009-10-26(xsd:date)
system1NA
  • September 1993
system1EU
  • 1994-01-27(xsd:date)
stub
  • x
system2EU
  • 2009-10-30(xsd:date)
dbkwik:all-the-tro...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetrope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:nintendo/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors
USK
  • 12(xsd:integer)
Genre
  • Run and gun
Type
  • Game
Caption
  • North American box art
Accessory
  • Classic Controller
system2AU
  • 2009-10-30(xsd:date)
dbkwik:eddsworld/p...iPageUsesTemplate
PEGI
  • 12(xsd:integer)
fix
  • a
System
  • SNES
  • Virtual Console
Class
  • D
acb
  • PG
ESRB
  • E10
Developer
Rating
  • x
Publisher
abstract
  • "Zombies Ate My Neighbors" is a game for the SNES/Genesis that made an appearance during Eddsworld Halloween Special 2007 during the beginning of the episode when Edd and Tord were playing it. Edd is playing as Zeke and Tord is playing as Julia. The objective is basically to just save your neighbors from being killed by various horror movie monsters. There are 48 levels in it, as well as a credits level and some bonus levels. The game is also referenced in Fun Dead. The Memory Eraser Gun seen in The End is based on the guns from Zombies Ate My Neighbors.
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors is your classic Zombie game created by Lucas Arts and published by Konami. This game is basically a parody of Devil World/Dark Adventure, a previous Konami arcade game, and in turn had a Spiritual Successor in the form of Ghoul Patrol, which was significantly less popular. Also inspired a later game loosely on Greek Mythology called Hercs Adventures as well as the X Box 360 game Monster Madness. Zeke or Julie (or both in 2 player mode) enter a series of mazes. Each level is a punny-titled maze containing B-movie monsters, wacky weapons and up to ten neighbors to rescue. A movie based loosely on the game is currently in production. Seriously. * Abnormal Ammo: Where else can you kill a giant worm with kitchen plates, or destroy a UFO with soda cans? * Affectionate Parody: Of pretty much every classic horror trope. * Ambidextrous Sprite: When Zeke is facing left or right, the blue lens of his 3D glasses is always the one closer to the camera. * Ancient Tomb * Attack of the 50 Foot Whatever: Two words: Titanic Toddler. * Also Giant snakes boss, Dr. Tongue's Giant spider form, and the level where giant ants are the normal enemies. * Attack of the Killer Whatever * Black Blood: the blood is replaced with purple ooze. * Bonus Level: About six of them, accessed by collecting a ? square in a level. * Bubble Gun * Chainsaw Good: Level 4. The chainsaw maniacs/lumberjacks in general. * Clown Car Grave * Combat Tentacles: Level 1-B and the Credits Level. * Continuing Is Painful: Passwords don't preserve your weapons or lives. * Cool Shades: See Rule of Cool * Creepy Doll: The killer doll enemies; some marketing genius had the idea to give them axes, too... * Darker and Edgier: The sequel took itself far more seriously and wasn't as arcade-fun as the first. * Your mileage may vary. Ghoul Patrol was focused much more on being more of an action/platformer as opposed to an arcade action game. There are many difference between the two, but the basic gameplay is still the same. * Developer's Room: The credits level take place in Lucas Arts' office. * Easter Egg: See Shout-Out. * Every Ten Thousand Points: You get a bonus neighbor. If you don't have any dead neighbors, you get a extra life. * Everything's Deader with Zombies * Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The level "Ants". Guess what the standard enemies there are. * Final Death: Once neighbors die, they don't come back. However, you can gain Bonus Neighbors once your score is high enough. * Game Breaking Bug: It's possible for the cheerleader after the first fight with Doctor Tongue to disappear before you collect her, making the game unwinnable. * Giant Space Flea From Nowhere: It's All There in the Manual that Dr. Tongue is the Big Bad of the game, but was any player expecting to first fight him in a non-descript attic level? * Guide Dang It: Some weapons are obvious choices for certain enemies. Some - like the Bubble Gun vs. Giant Ants - not so much. * Although the manual does point this out and many other monster weaknesses, so it's mostly Read the Freaking Manual. The best weapon in the game, the Flamethrower, is a Guide Dang It in itself since it's in a very obscure place and can be Lost Forever if you bypass it. * Absolutely nothing tells you that the last form of Dr. Tongue is weak against plates; although once you found that out, it starts making more sense why Level 41 had so many plates strewn around the level to begin with. * Hockey Mask and Chainsaw * In Name Only: Ghoul Patrol was reworked into a sequel for Zombies to cash in on the game's popularity. It ended up killing the franchise. * It's worth pointing out that ZAMN was not an immediate success in the first place and, like the cult movies that inspired the game in the first place, it's popularity had to build over time. Ghoul Patrol gets a lot of shit for what it is, some of it more justified than others, but calling it a franchise killer isn't really accurate (Ghoul Patrol wasn't even advertised as much as the first game itself). It would have had to come out in the early-to-mid 2000s and disappointed everyone before it could've really killed the franchise. * There is also a song called ZAMN on the radio. Sadly, no video game references. * A metalcore group named themselves after the game as well. * Infant Immortality: Averted, oddly enough. Not only are babies one of the kinds of Victims, but you also fight a Giant Baby as a boss three times. Defeating the latter merely turns it back to normal, though. * Infinity+1 Sword: The Flamethrower. Able to quickly destroy just about any monster. Good luck finding it in the one level it's located in. * Inventory Management Puzzle: Too Awesome to Use? No, you'll waste too much health and time if you don't use it. You like to stockpile weapons? Good luck finding the plates when you need them right now! * Lightning Bruiser: The giant babies. * Lost Forever: The Flamethrower. * Mars Needs Cheerleaders * Monster Mash * Night of the Living Mooks * Nintendo Hard: One of the ROM hacks of the game decided you need between 1-3 tourist couples that each turn into a pair of werewolves 15 seconds after the start of the level in most of the levels. Have fun with those speed shoes. * Nonstandard Game Over: Don't let all of your neighbors die! * One-Hit Kill: Most enemies have a weapon they're particularly weak against. * Poison Mushroom: One of the mystery potion's side effects is to turn you into Mr. Hyde, who will actively hunt down and kill neighbors. Or your partner in a 2 player mode. * RuleOfTotallyRadical: Zeke inexplicably wears a pair of 3D glasses throughout the whole game * Sequential Boss: The final battle with Dr. Tongue has him first transform into a spider, then a giant head. * Shout-Out: Entering BCDF as an opening password sent you straight to the Day of the Tentacle bonus level, themed after the video game of the same name. * Sprint Shoes * There's No B in Movie: Pretty much the premise of the game. * Transformation Sequence: Big purple beasts in ZAMN, Grim Reapers in GP. * Ungrateful Bitch/ No Hero Discount / No Sympathy: No matter how often you rescue them from mortal danger, the teachers will always give you an "F"! OH NOES! * Unwinnable By Mistake: Very rare, but it is possible to get yourself stuck by running out of ammo for all your guns and wasting all the keys and not having a bazooka or potion to blast the doors down.
  • Zombies Ate My Neighbors (Zombies in PAL regions) is a video game released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1993. It was released to the North American Wii Virtual Console service the day before Halloween, 2009.
  • This is an upcoming remake of the classic run and gun video game of the same name.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software