Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Yet Another Harebrained Scheme

So if you were around last spring, you might've read about one of my exploits: scamming the scammers and getting an iPod nano for a net cost (to me) of about $13. I loved the whole process for a couple reasons: 1) I got a dirt cheap iPod Nano and 2) it was nice to stick it to people notorious for taking advantage of others on the internet. This year I was thinking about repeating the process for a near free Nintendo Wii, but while reading one of my favorite websites, Engadget, I had another idea.

Last November I purchased an Xbox 360, and have loved it so far. SO of course I keep up with Xbox news, and this article caught my eye: "Microsoft offering free repairs for all 2005 Xbox 360s" and boy, that got me thinking. I was thrilled that my current Xbox 360 had its manufacturer's warranty extended from 90 days to a full year, but I was willing to bet that there were plenty of people out there who don't keep up with the news.

So what's this scheme, you ask? Buy a broken Xbox 360 manufactured in 2005, return it to Microsoft for its free repairs, and either keep it or (more likely) turn around and sell it on eBay and hopefully make a profit decent enough to take a good chunk out of the price of a Wii. Not as good as a free Wii, but it seems more legit and a lot less of a hassle.

Let's see how this all turned out:

January 16th: Time to get a busted 360

Of course the most logical place to scope out a busted Xbox 360 would be eBay. A notorious problem plaguing early Xbox 360s is the "red ring of death" - a case where the Xbox has something wrong and displays 3 red lights around the power button; so I figured that would be a good place to begin my search.

Red Ring of Death!

Going into this I had three criteria for any Xbox I wanted to buy:

1) It MUST have a manufacture date before 1/1/2006. Now, 90% of auctions don't mention the manufacture date, but you can always use eBay's "ask seller a question" feature and most people will be more than happy to provide the date for you.
2) While we're on the asking seller a question bit, you also MUST find out if the console has ever been opened or previously repaired. Why? Because sometimes these things can void Microsoft's factory warranty. If the warranty's shot, don't buy it.
3) The price had to be reasonable. I set a maximum of $140 for myself including shipping, which I knew would be moderately expensive.

With those things in mind, I found an auction for a 360 made in 11/2005 at a decent price. A day and a half and $134 (after shipping) later, I was the proud "winner" of a used, broken Xbox 360. Note that it was at this point that I had my first thought of "Good lord, Matt. What are you doing?!" But none the less, I kept going.

My eBay Score

Now as soon as the auction ended and I had paid for my Xbox, I sent an email asking the guy (or girl, heh) for the Manufacturer's Date as well as the Serial number from the label on the back of the 360 before he mailed it off. He complied, and with that info in hand, it was time to turn to Microsoft.

After doing some hunting around, I found the customer service number: 1-800-4MY-XBOX. I called up and was greeted by some automated crap with an overly chippy guy who let me through some common troubleshooting techniques. After (oddly enough) nothing worked, I was transferred to "Susan Jones" who I assume was in sunny Bangalore, India. Ugh. I gave her the information regarding my newly purchased Xbox, and also after going through ALL the same steps again she informed me that my Xbox
indeed would be repaired for no charge, and that Microsoft would be sending me a box.

So I had two things incoming, a box from Redmond and a busted Xbox from eBay. Time to play the waiting game.


January 24th: Well, well - that was fast

A View from the Mattcave
(A view from the cave that is my room. 2 TVs - 1HD, 1 old ass 11"; Dreamcast hooked to HDTV via VGA, 2 Xbox 360s (functional one to HDTV via component), original Xbox hooked up via component, and a hacked series2 TiVo running through S-Video)

So I get home today and find not one but two boxes outside of my front door. One's my "brand new" Xbox (the one on top with the white tray is the older, busted 360; the functional one has the chrome tray):

Twin Xboxen!

...and the other is just a box from Microsoft, complete with a return label and detailed packing instructions:

Redmond wants it back!

At this point I'm feeling a lot better - this crap might work! I packed up the busted console and sent it on its merry way. Stay tuned to see if this ends up working!


February 6th: Holy Crap, it Worked

A new challenger approaches

Wow, this stupid idea actually worked! Now I'm in possession of 2 Xbox 360s, one which I paid entirely too much for (retail), the other, not so much. Microsoft sent me a replacement 360, and with a manufacture date of 11/2006 I'm pretty sure they just sent a new unit. The box just had the 360 and a note telling me about the process:

Papers make it legit, right?

So now that I have two 360s, what should I do now?

BUY ME!

Oh yeah. That. Anybody feel like buying an Xbox 360?

Monday, January 15, 2007

Best Albums of 2006

2006 was a decent year for music, but it was a lot harder to rank the albums this year than last year. No album blew me away like the tops of the lists have the past few years. Granted there were a good number of excellent albums, there were also a few huge disappointments (I'm looking at you, Outkast). The list this year began with 97 albums, and I've narrowed it down to these below.

I've put together a playlist on finetune that has some of the songs featured in this list - give it a listen while you read through and let me know what you think!




On to the list...



28. Eyes to the Telescope - KT Tunstall
Reflections: This is a pretty decent pop album. Everybody's heard "Black Horse" on the radio, and like me, I'm sure that most of you were at least the slightest bit intrigued. There was something different, something interesting. I listened to this album on a whim and discovered that it indeed was pretty good. Nothing revolutionary, just decent music.
Best tracks: Suddenly I See, Black Horse and the Cherry Tree, Other Side of the World



27. The Arockalypse - Lordi
Reflections: For those unfamiliar with Lordi, they're metal in the style of Gwar - borderline silly lyrics, loud-ass guitars and drums, and costumes! This album is great for what it tries to be - really, really over-the-top metal. It's hilarious, huge, and fun.
Best tracks: Bringing Back the Balls to Rock, The Kids Who Wanna Play with the Dead, Hard Rock Hallelujah



26. St. Elsewhere - Gnarls Barkley
Reflections: I have to admit, after the initial 1-2 punch of "Go-Go Gadget Gospel" and "Crazy" I had this album penned at #1 for the year, but the rest of the album just couldn't keep up the intensity. I love Cee-Lo Green (as noted in the past) so I was eager to hear how he and DangerMouse would work together, and the results are a mixed bag. The highs are incredible, the lows downright forgettable. There are some great singles on this album at least.
Best tracks: Crazy, Go-Go Gadget Gospel, Gone Daddy Gone



25. Garden Ruin - Calexico
Reflections: I really got into Calexico after hearing their split with Iron and Wine last year and have fallen in love with the band. This album is in a style a lot more subdued than their past efforts which bordered on modern indie-mariachi. This album still feels like a product of the Southwest and is a refreshing change of pace from most of the music I hear. "Roka" is a song that everybody should hear - it's incredibly sweet and seductive.
Best tracks: Roka, Panic Open String



24. Let's Get Out of this Country - Camera Obscura
Reflections: This is great poppy music. The lyrics are good, the melodies are light - this is a perfect album to have on in the background to brighten your day. If you like feel-good happy-go-lucky music, this is an album for you.
Best tracks: Lloyd I'm Ready to Be Heartbroken, Dory Previn, If Looks Could Kill



23. A City by the Light Divided - Thursday
Reflections: I was never a huge fan of Thursday, but the more I listen to them, the more I understand. This album is my favorite Thursday disc to date - the energy is great to start, but sadly falls off. I guess it might be my love of punk, but I like the harder, rougher Thursday a lot more than the softer stuff.
Best tracks: The Other Side of the Crash / Over and Out (of Control), Counting 5-4-3-2-1, Sugar in the Sacrament, At This Velocity



22. Stadium Arcadium - Red Hot Chili Peppers
Reflections: First off, I can't stand that this is a double album. Second, the track order is atrocious - it's like they put in a disc with all the tracks, hit 'shuffle' and let that stand as the final track list. This album has no continuity, no flow, and trying to stomach 28 tracks of RHCP is a bit too much for one sitting for me. That said, this album easily has some of the best singles of the year. I find myself liking the softer, more melodic Chili Pepper (like those from Californication and By the Way) songs now, and just can't stand the pseudo-rap songs that they feel a need to put on every disc. The other filler tracks water this release down - if it was only one disc of the best 13 or so songs this could be in the top 5.
Best tracks: Snow (Hey Oh), Slow Cheetah, Wet Sand, Strip My Mind



21. King - T.I.
Reflections: This is grungy southern rap at its finest. The King of the South puts up yet another quality album full of great beats, good rhymes, and I just love how T.I.'s attitude is so unapologetic about how incredible he is. His ego is incredible.
Best tracks: What You Know, Why You Wanna, Get It



20. Never Trust a Hippy - NOFX
Reflections: When I heard this EP I was really, really excited for the next NOFX album (2006's "Wolf in Wolves Clothing) but unfortunately the album couldn't match the intensity of this EP. This is 13 minutes of blast-you-in-the-face punk rock at its best. The cover of the Pat Smear track "Golden Boys" is great. Of course this EP keeps up the typical NOFX humor, including saying that "Jesus Christ is coming back/He wants to kick Mel Gibson's ass". Great stuff.
Best tracks: Seeing Double at the Triple Rock, Golden Boys, I'm Going to Hell for This One



19. At War with the Mystics - The Flaming Lips
Reflections: I loved the last Flaming Lips album, and am just as pleased with this one. I love how guitars play a bigger part on this album. The disc opens with a bang ("Yeah Yeah Yeah") and is just a fun ride from start to finish. In the vein of the Dark Side of the Moon/Wizard of Oz mashup, some enterprising stoners have figured out that "At War with the Mystics" syncs up with the 1982 Ron Fricke film "Baraka" and have posted a movie file of the two combined. Go to At War with Baraka and download it. You'll love it. If not, I'll refund your $0 purchase.
Best tracks: The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power), The Sound of Failure /It's Dark...Is It Always This Dark??, It Overtakes Me/The Stars are So Big...I am So Small...Do I Stand a Change?



18. Pretty Little Head - Nellie McKay
Reflections: I have to admit, I love the stuff Nellie McKay is doing. I don't know what it is about her music, I just enjoy listening. Not too many people can put out such a nutty album. The first track is a pep-rally-in-disguise for gay marriage and there are plenty of other hard-hitting social topics, but all are wrapped in a sweet, innocent girlish tone.
Best tracks: Cupcake, I Am Nothing, Swept Away



17. Whiskey on a Sunday - Flogging Molly
Reflections: This is primarily a live FM album, which came bundled with a DVD containing a documentary on the band and its travels. Why put a live disc in the list? First off, the intensity and raw energy of Flogging Molly live is absolutely incredible on this disc. I can't compare it to the real thing as I sadly haven't gotten to see them live as of yet. There's also one in-studio track, which had only been released as a live track B-side. I have a sentimental attachment to that song, as it reminds me of somebody near and dear to my heart. The rendition of "Black Friday Rule" is mind blowing, as are the acoustic versions of some FM classics.
Best tracks: Black Friday Rule (Live), Drunken Lullabies (Acoustic), Laura, What's Left of the Flag (Live)



16. Gulag Orkestar - Beirut
Reflections: Wow, this album came out of nowhere. I love Slavic sounding music, and this album delivers in a big way. It's grandiose, dreary, and absolutely stunning. Reminds me of my time walking around Prague.
Best tracks: Postcards From Italy, Prenzlauerberg, Rhineland (Heartland), The Gulag Orkestar



15. Fox Confessor Brings the Flood - Neko Case
Reflections: I'm no lover of country music, but Neko Case (whom I loved with The New Pornographers) does it right. This is a great sounding album, but as beautiful as it is I find myself losing focus about halfway through. Too much of the same stuff, I guess. The stuff that's there is great though!
Best tracks: Hold On, Hold On, Maybe Sparrow



14. Hip Hop is Dead - Nas
Reflections: Nas comes out of nowhere to drop the best of his career. He's raw and unrefined, but his rhymes have never been better. This album is hard hitting and put together so well that I couldn't help but love it. Oh, and the collaboration with Jay-Z, "Black Republican" is the best song I've heard all year. The use of "Marcia Religiosa" from Godfather 2 as the hook is sheer genius - the track feels symphonic and expansive. Great track.
Best tracks: Hip Hop is Dead, Black Republican (with Jay-Z), You Can't Kill Me




13. Inhuman Rampage - DragonForce
Reflections: While this on first listen sounded like trashy metal, the retardedly fast guitar playing met with the really out-there fantasy lyrics (most of the songs are about dragons, princesses, other mythical creatures) and something just struck a chord with me. Watch the videos on YouTube to see some awesome guitar playing.
Best tracks: Through the Fire and the Flames, Operation Ground and Pound, Body Breakdown



12. Black Holes & Revelations - Muse
Reflections: I came across this album late in the year but it has really grown on me. It's space pop meets Ziggy Stardust meets Radiohead. I don't really know another way to describe other than to say that it's really damned good. Everybody should at least listen to "Knights of Cydonia."
Best tracks: Knights of Cydonia, Supermassive Black Hole, Map of the Problematique



11. Phobia - Breaking Benjamin
Reflections: I didn't really get into this album until late 2007, when I got tickets to go see them live and decided to check out their old stuff before the concert. I ended up really liking this album - it's a good catchy rock album. Sure, the album does get a bit repetitive, but it's still good.
Best tracks: The Diary of Jane, Breath, Evil Angel, Dance With The Devil



10. FutureSex/LoveSounds - Justin Timberlake
Reflections: I make no apologies for the fact that I have a man-crush on JT. I loved "Justified" and this album did not disappoint. From the mind-blowingly good "My Love" with T.I. to Three-6 Mafia's appearance on "Chop Me Up", JT gets the best out of his contributors. One of my favorite tracks on the disc, "Losing My Way", is a sad tale of a man who loses everything due to a drug addiction - it's just done so incredibly well. This album is not your typical top-40 garbage. It's a gem.
Best tracks: My Love, Sexyback, Losing My Way, Summer Love, Chop Me Up



9. Game Theory - The Roots
Reflections: The first few tracks are chaos, and things are muddled - right into the third track, which a minute in explodes with Black Thought and Malik B's incredible raps. For anybody who's into The Roots (and really, everybody should be) this is an album you need. Without a doubt the best hip-hop album of the year. "Game Theory", the title track, is one hell of a ride.
Best tracks: Game Theory, Clock With No Hands, Baby, Don't Feel Right, Here I Come



8. The Black Parade - My Chemical Romance
Reflections: First off, this album isn't as good as "Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge" for one reason - there's too many slower, boring tracks. MCR is best when they're trying to rock the doors off the building, not making sappy pseudo-goth ballads. The songs that rock on here do live up to their billing though. "The Sharpest Lives" and "This is How I Disappear" are great. I applaud the band's rather bold decision to make a theme-based album, and I think it worked out pretty well. I could just do without the tear-jerking goth crap.
Best tracks: This is How I Disappear, The Sharpest Lives, House of Wolves, Mama, The End, Dead!



7. II - Billy Talent
Reflections: This was easily the most anticipated album of the year for me, as after discovering the band's first album I fell in love. Billy Talent is the best that pop-punk has to offer (not that pop-punk really offers all that much). The album rocks from start to finish. There's not much else I could've asked for, to tell the truth. A solid sophomore effort.
Best tracks: Red Flag, Worker Bees, Pins and Needles, Surrender, Perfect World, Devil in a Midnight Mass



6. For Blood & Empire - Anti-Flag
Reflections: Yes, I know. Anti-Flag is best known as the far-Left leaning punk band, and this album is an obvious jab at the Bush administration and a proclamation of the band's anti-war, anti-corporate views. No, I might not fit into those categories, but this is punk music at its finest. Fast guitars, smart lyrics, and energy - energy that isn't matched on any other disc this year. These guys are passionate, and it shows in their music.
Best tracks: I'd Tell You But..., The Press Corpse, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, War Sucks Let's Party!, The W.T.O. Kills Farmers



5. Happy Hollow - Cursive
Reflections: After "The Ugly Organ" I was worried if Cursive could ever live up to their past glory, and "Happy Hollow" sure did deliver. What's interesting this time around is that the album takes a thematic approach, with each of the songs representing a "hymn" describing some sin or wayward act, and the album serving as the "hymnal". The songs run the range of taboo topics from homosexuality in the church, to mindless daydreaming, to questioning God, and the frustration of feeling you've been abandoned by God. The album does have a decidedly sarcastic and irreverant approach to religion, and it's interesting to hear.
Best tracks: Dorothy at Forty, Flag and Family, Dorothy Dreams of Tornadoes, Rise Up! Rise Up!



4. Decemberunderground - AFI
Reflections: The opening, "Prelude 12/21", is haunting and sets the mood for the album brilliantly. It took me a while to come around to this album but in due time it surpassed its predecessor in my mind. It's dark, moody, melodic, and at times, raw. When Davey Havok goes from singing sweetly to screaming his heart out, you can't help but feel it too. On "Endlessly, She Said" he describes the pain of heartbreak, and when he screams out in pain, it gets me.
Best tracks: Endlessly, She said, Love Like Winter, Summer Shudder, Kiss and Control



3. Dog Problems - The Format
Reflections: I want to stop right here and give credit on this one to Zack Brown. He pointed this album out to me and I absolutely fell in love with it. It's sweet, melodic pop that is just infectious. The ditties on this album have a knack for getting stuck in my head, but in this case, that's a good thing. The first four tracks knock the ball out of the park and the rest of the album keeps up the pace. So can we take the next hour and talk about me?
Best tracks: I'm Actual, The Compromise, Matches, Time Bomb, Snails, Dog Problems



2. The Crane Wife - The Decemberists
Reflections: In what should be a shock to absolutely nobody at this point, The Decemberists return and put up another stunning album. They tell incredible stories in beautiful ways. Each song is like a miniature play, acted out in song over the course of a few (or 12) minutes. I love this band. I love this album. This would've been my album for the year until #1 came into my life in 2007...
Best tracks: O Valencia!, Summersong, Shankill Butchers, The Island: Come and See/The Landlord's Daughter/You'll Not Feel the Drowning



1. The Sufferer & the Witness - Rise Against

Reflections: My friend Ashley got me turned onto her favorite band, Rise Against, and after a while I took her advice and gave this album a listen. What happened was that I found possibly the greatest punk album I've ever heard - I love every single song, the energy is crazy, and even after about 200+ listen-throughs in 2007 alone I'm still not even remotely tired of it. This is currently sitting at #1 in my all-time favorite album list. No song gets me pumped like 'Injection' does.
Best tracks: Injection, Prayer of the Refugee, Worth Dying For, The Good Left Undone


[EDIT: 2 more added 7/08, along with FineTunes Playlist]

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Sunday, January 14, 2007

Best Songs of 2006

Like any top 10 list, this is always subject to change. Here's my list and a brief rundown of why for each one:


10. Steady, as She Goes - The Raconteurs
Rationale: I'm not a huge White Stripes fan, but I really liked the sound and feel of this really laid back song. I think that most nerdy guys can relate to this song - we've all been pegged as just "a friend" by a girl we've liked. This song is about the ineptness of that situation.
Favorite line: Well here we go again, you've found yourself a friend, that knows you well / But no matter what you do, you'll always feel as though you tripped and fell


9. Laura - Flogging Molly
Rationale: A song about a lost love, a lover's lament. It's heartbreaking, really. You really get the feeling of longing, of the pain in such a loss. I also like this song for other reasons. At the time of writing this, this CD's been in my alarm clock, so the first 30 seconds have been what's woken me up every day for the past two weeks. Not a bad way to start the day.
Favorite line: And I, I could've walked on the Sun / But my world came undone


8. O Valencia! - The Decemberists
Rationale: This song is peppy and I love the instrumentation. The story of a forbidden love and a tragic ending. It's dramatic and tragic - a three minute Romeo and Juliet, set in Spain, all nice and neat for your ears.
Favorite line: When we first laid eyes / I swore to no compromise / 'Til I felt my caress on your skin


7. I'd Tell You But... - Anti-Flag
Rationale: This track kicks off the album with one hell of a jumpstart. You can feel the outrage in their music - Anti-Flag is not happy with the state of affairs in the USA and they are going to let you know. This is 2:10 of incredible punk rock.
Favorite line: Your killing of my family / Did not make a fan out of me


6. Crazy - Gnarls Barkley
Rationale: The first time I heard this song I knew it was going to be one of my favorites. The opening is genius, and Cee-Lo's bellowing choruses give this song something unique, something that other song's don't replicate. I love the man's voice.
Favorite line: I remember when I lost my mind / There was something so pleasant about that place


5. The Compromise - The Format
Rationale: This song must be effective, as it always makes me want to dance. The Format created an incredible gem with this song - it's boiling over with happiness.
Favorite line: So meet me in the middle / Well come on let's make up a dance / And we'll agree to call it The Compromise


4. My Love (featuring T.I.) - Justin Timberlake
Rationale: Everything about this song is perfect - the beats, Justin's high, delicate vocals, T.I.'s swank rhymes - I really just can't complain about this song. It's even better when paired with the intro from the previous song. There's nothing wrong with this song at all.
Favorite line: I can see us holding hands / Walking on the beach, our toes in the sand / I can see us on the country side / Sitting on the grass, laying side-by-side


3. This Is How I Disappear - My Chemical Romance
Rationale: The hardest rocking song of the year for me, this song just gets me going. It's dark and loud, it's bleak in message, but it's incredible. I love it.
Favorite line: And without you is how I disappear


2. Rise Up! Rise Up! - Cursive
Rationale: This song musically is great, but it's the lyrics that really top the charts for me. It's a song about a man questioning religion, refusing to accept that which he's been told. He's troubled, and it shows in his desperate grasp to get others to join him and "rise up" in leaving religion behind him. A brilliantly constructed song.
Favorite line: I wasted half my life on the thought that I'd live forever / I wasn't taught to seize the day, but to work and worship / 'Cause "he that liveth and believeth" supposedly never dies


1. Black Republican (featuring Jay-Z) - Nas
Rationale: Jay-Z and Nas come together on the most grandiose rap track I can ever remember hearing. The sample used is from The Godfather II's "Marcia Religiosa" and it provides the stage for a song full of pomp, power, and importance. Nas and Jay-Z put some of the tightest rhymes of their careers on this track - if only Jay-Z could've put some of this on his terrible album this year ("Kingdom Come").
Favorite line: When you put in the game at age sixteen / Then you mix things like cars, jewelry and Miss Thing / Jealousy, ego, and pride this thing brings

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Culture Clash

While watching "The Fountainhead" on my HDTV through my Xbox 360 today, I realized the inherently ridiculous nature of the setup. There's something about watching an old black and white movie, full of its flickering errors, bits and pops, on a DVD upscaled on a big, clear screen. What made things even worse was that in the middle of the movie, my 360 popped up with a message informing me that "NHL2K7 Demo download is complete" - old meets new.

I'm working on my Best Albums of 2006 list, along with a Best Songs of 2006. While the list is limited to releases in the calendar year 2006, the album I probably listened to the most last year was "Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike" by Gogol Bordello. Do I expect that you'll like it? Maybe. I've really only met a handful of people who had a taste in music that has significant overlap with mine - most people either they really like the indie stuff and hate the punk, like the punk but hate the rap, love the rap but hate the rock, can't stand opera or classical but love pop - and though I've come to the realization that I'll probably never meet anybody who likes all the same stuff I do, I don't mind it at all. Just as long as my friends (and if I weren't so ridiculously single, girlfriend) are willing to put up with my diverse taste in music.

2006 was a fantastic year for video games. While I don't have a Wii (damn you, launch day woes!) as of yet, I did pick up 4 new consoles and ditched 1 in the last calendar year. I happily ditched my PSP on eBay en route to buying a new laptop as I never played the damned thing and didn't like the games anyway. The highlights for me were picking up a 360 and a DS, both of which have given me a great number of great gaming experiences. The best game I played all year, by a close margin over Gears of War, was Psychonauts for the original Xbox. It's a hilarious, fun adventure game that you can tell was written for smart people with a good sense of humor to enjoy. I am not one of those guys who strives for 100% completion of a game - to get every little bit and piece - but Psychonauts drove me to that. It was that good. Other games, when I finish them, I put them back on the shelf and pick them up later - this game I sat through over a series of days and knocked out all 100%. Go ahead and chalk Psychonauts in my all-time Top 5.

This is not to take away from the ridiculously superb Gears of War, which achieves the oddity of creating the environment of beautiful carnage. Sure it's a game full of fast-paced action, where you practically bathe in the blood of your foes - but its hauntingly beautiful. I'm not trying to get all artsy, but the game truly was an experience different from just about every game I've ever played. I've never played a Resident Evil game (even though I own one for the Dreamcast) and I've heard that Resident Evil 4 instilled many of the same emotions, but I can't comment on that. I can say that the closest that any game I've ever played has come was Eternal Darkness back on the Gamecube - which is also in my all-time Top 10 games list.

Okay, enough mentioning it, here's my Top 10 Video Games list as-of-right-this-second which of course, is subject to change at any moment:

1. Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time (N64)
2. Castlevania: Symphony of the Night (PS1)
3. Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (SNES)
4. MegaMan 2 (NES)
5. Psychonauts (Xbox)
6. Metroid Prime (Gamecube)
7. Gears of War (Xbox 360)
8. Beyond Good and Evil (Gamecube)
9. Gunstar Heroes (Genesis)
10. Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem (Gamecube)

The close calls: Zelda: Wind Waker (Gamecube), Mario and Luigi (GBA), Sonic CD (Sega CD), Ikaruga (Gamecube), Final Fantasy VIII (PS1), Secret of Mana (SNES), Marvel vs. Capcom 2 (Dreamcast)

I'm not going to get into the 2006 GT football season. I'll miss Calvin.

Oh, and feel free to go to Half.com and buy my stuff. Because I really have too much stuff.


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