KRASG12C selective inhibitors, such as sotorasib and adagrasib, have raised hopes of targeting other KRAS mutant alleles in cancer patients. We report that KRAS wild-type amplified tumor models are sensitive to treatment with the small molecule KRAS inhibitors BI-2493 and BI-2865. These pan-KRAS inhibitors directly target the "OFF" state of KRAS and result in potent anti-tumor activity in pre-clinical models of cancers driven by KRAS mutant proteins. Here, we used the high-throughput cellular viability PRISM assay to assess the anti-proliferative activity of BI-2493 in a 900+ cancer cell line panel, expanding on our previous work. KRAS wild-type amplified cancer cell lines, with a copy number >7, were identified as the most sensitive, across cell lines with any KRAS alterations, to our pan-KRAS inhibitors. Importantly, our data suggest that a KRAS "OFF" inhibitor is better suited to treat KRAS wild-type amplified tumors than a KRAS "ON" inhibitor. KRAS wild-type amplification is common in patients with gastroesophageal cancers where it has been shown to act as a unique cancer driver with little overlap to other actionable mutations. The pan-KRAS inhibitors BI-2493 and BI-2865 show potent anti-tumor activity in vitro and in vivo in KRAS wild-type amplified cell lines from this and other tumor types. In conclusion, this is the first study to demonstrate that direct pharmacological inhibition of KRAS shows anti-tumor activity in preclinical models of cancer with KRAS wild-type amplification, suggesting a novel therapeutic concept for patients with cancers bearing this KRAS alteration.