1) World Series of Poker - PS2
Damn you poker craze, damn you. While it can be fun initially, after a while, you're soon going to realize that there are better ways to play with yourself. The one positive of this game is how insanely fast you can go through hands. Too bad that doesn't seem to apply for whatever reason to Omaha and it's variations.
2) World Series of Poker: Tournament of Champions - PS2
Well, as if I didn't learn my lesson the first time........ "Hey, let's take out everything that made WSOP fun and repackage it with new graphics!" "zOMG OKAY~!".
3) Excluding The Legend of Zelda, every "CLASSIC NES" series game I bought for the GBA - Game Boy Advance
Well, the games in question include Zelda II, Super Mario Bros., Metroid, and Castlevania. Not that there's anything wrong with them, mind you, it's just I find LoZ to be much more enjoyable in the sense of sitting down and playing a game comfortably. The other four were okay, but it's just not the same in my opinion.
4) Dragon Warrior II - NES
Back in 1994, I wish I knew whatever drugs my parents put me on to pester them nonstop until they relented and ordered a copy of it from Funco. I must've been a masochist back then.
5) GTA: LCS - PS2
After the awesomeness that was Vice City and San Andreas, could you really go wrong with another GTA game?
Yes, you could. It pretty much takes all the real fun things that you had in VC and SA and shits all over them, the only things carrying over is the variety of weapons for each slot and motorcycles. Other than that, it feels to much like the original GTA3. While I liked GTA3, VC and SA were clearly superior to it.
6) X-Wing Collectors CD - PC
I remember back in the day when my best friend's brother showed me a copy of TIE Fighter on his PC. I thought it was awesome. It was Star Wars, and you're playing as the Empire! And it looks cool, too! Well, he gave me a copy of the game and a cheap copied version of the manual (see, back then kiddies, we had this thing for diskette games called Copy Protection. It was a way of making sure that you had paid for the game by making you type some random word from the manual. As for what a diskette is, well....). So, I saw the CD version of X-Wing a post-Christmas shopping spree thanks to an insanely large (for an eleven year old on 5 dollars a week allowance) check that my grandmother had given me, and thought "Wow, it's going to be just like TIE Fighter only I'm a Rebel!" Only it wasn't.