WWE pay per views are fun to sit down and watch with your pals, but that doesn't mean they always hit it out of the park. It's difficult to produce a three or four-hour show of that magnitude and get good results ten times out of ten, and for that, we can sympathize with them.

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However, that doesn't excuse the fact that some of these events are just outright bizarre in how uneven they are. Whether it be due to the matches themselves or the general booking decisions, we just want to shake Vince McMahon and ask him "why?".

P.S: there's no order, here, we're just rattling them off year by year.

10 Breaking Point (2009)

We actually quite like the Breaking Point idea (even though it could’ve been called Submission Sunday which could’ve caused a whole lot of problems), with most of the matches being contested under submission-based rules.

However, the execution of it just did not work. Punk vs Undertaker’s weird finish felt wrong, Cena vs Orton was very paint by numbers, and nothing on the rest of the card was worth talking about – including Legacy defeating DX, which sounds odd in its own right.

Nothing seemed to click into place for WWE on this night, and that’s the honest truth.

9 Over The Limit (2010)

As a new pay per view, it felt like the expectation was for this show to come bursting out of the gate with immediate success: and it didn’t happen.

Show/Swagger failed to elevate Jack in the right way, Cena/Batista was incredibly predictable, and the only shining light was Mysterio/Punk.

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WWE was in a difficult spot, and thankfully, Nexus was waiting right around the next corner to breathe some life into the weekly programming.

Also, Edge vs Randy Orton was a tremendous let down as a result of an injury to Randy.

8 SummerSlam (2010)

The main event match of Team WWE vs Team Nexus was set up perfectly for the NXT guys to get the upper hand and really kickstart their run at the top of the card. When they lost, however, it felt like the air had been let out of the building as Super Cena reigned supreme once again.

Then you had Big Show squashing the Straight Edge Society, Melina and Alicia Fox dragging the Divas Championship down even further, and Kane defeating Rey Mysterio in a bout that could’ve and should’ve, been so much better than it actually was.

7 WrestleMania 27 (2011)

WrestleMania is supposed to be the showcase of the immortals, and this Atlanta show really, really struggled to live up to the hype. Taker/HHH was the best match of the night and even that was only their third-best bout of the Mania trilogy they shared, whereas on the rest of the card we had Cole/Lawler, Edge/Del Rio and Miz/Cena – with the latter ending in a very odd way due to an apparent concussion for The Awesome One.

Not even the presence of The Rock could save the day on this occasion.

6 Over The Limit (2011)

Over The Limit is in here again, and while the 2012 edition will not be featuring, let it be known that there’s a very good chance it should’ve and could’ve.

With the evening being kicked off by Ezekiel Jackson getting a DQ win and Sin Cara botching the finish against Chavo Guerrero, you know that you’re in for a rough night.

This is also where the Mason Ryan experiment was completely and utterly exposed, with CM Punk also losing as a result of that.

Orton/Christian was good but nowhere near to save this disaster of a show that was capped off by Lawler/Cole in a Kiss My Foot match and Cena/Miz. Wow.

5 No Way Out (2012)

The return of No Way Out really struggled to capture the imagination of the WWE Universe, which is hardly surprising when the main event is John Cena vs Big Show in what equated to a house show match with a feel-good ending.

Santino Marella vs Ricardo Rodriguez also went down on this card, in addition to a handful of really forgettable encounters.

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No Way Out’s lineage deserved better than this, and even that may be an understatement as WWE continued to hobble through storylines and events with a real lack of grace in 2012.

4 Survivor Series (2013)

None of the traditional Survivor Series matches had any real meaning, John Cena vs Alberto Del Rio was boring, and the main event saw Randy Orton defeat Big Show in one of the worst pay per view main events in recent memory.

We also had Mark Henry beating Ryback in less than five minutes on this card because of course, we did.

Survivor Series is supposed to be one of the figureheads of the WWE calendar, and this was a poor representation of that.

Poor is probably quite a nice way of putting it, actually.

3 TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2014)

The world title was still absent thanks to the one and only Brock Lesnar, meaning that the main event of this show saw Bray Wyatt take on Dean Ambrose in a TLC match. While that sounds pretty exciting they just weren’t able to live up to the hype, with Bray winning courtesy of an utterly bizarre ‘malfunction’.

The rest of this card read like a standard house show, and that’s not the way you want to finish off the final pay per view of the year – or any pay per view, really.

2 Survivor Series (2015)

The Brothers of Destruction squashed The Wyatt Family and they did so because it was Survivor Series, and it was the 25th anniversary of Taker’s debut. Oh, and there was also only one 5-on-5 Survivor Series elimination match on this card, and it wasn’t very good.

The main event saw the conclusion of the tournament used to determine would be the new WWE World Heavyweight Champion, and if Roman Reigns winning wasn’t bad enough, things were made even more bizarre when Sheamus cashed in and won the belt – which very few people wanted to see.

1 Battleground (2017)

Jinder Mahal and Randy Orton

On this night, we saw what we can only describe as one of the worst main events in the history of WWE’s pay per view run. That match was Jinder Mahla vs Randy Orton for the WWE Championship, inside of the Punjabi Prison.

The Great Khali returned in order to help Jinder win, despite the fact that the guy can barely walk.

Cena also crushed (pun not intended) Rusev in a flag match earlier on in the evening, with Nakamura beating Baron Corbin by DQ instead of in a clean match.

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