Professor James said:
Guise Of the Wolf,Rekoil, and now Rambo; And it's only February! It's not looking good so far and all there needs to be is for a highly anticipated game this year to come out and suck a rhinoceros taint and this will be one of the worst years for gaming in recent memory IMO.
Holy generalizations, Batman!
Easy, there. We're only approaching March, and there was nothing major planned in the first trimester of the year - except maybe for Thief. I'm sure you'll point me to the professional reviews but - eh. I'm having fun with it.
My point is that you're better off taking each year's cream of the crop for what it's worth, instead of hoping we'll have great year after great year.
Plus, if I may be so bold - your examples are a bit odd. Rambo: The Video Game? Really? You had that on your radar? It popped out of left field and you were expecting it to be worth something? As for Rekoil, well - Jim Sterling thoroughly thrashed it in one of his reviews. Bad games are bad. That's a given.
Guise of the Wolf, though, doesn't even surprise me. Greenlight is a giant Petri dish where absolutely anything, from the best indie game to date to a complete piece of crap, can be allowed to sprout. We're bound to see something like this happen again until Valve either closes Greenlight or slaps a curating system onto it.
I remember reading the initial comments during the game's pitch and shaking my head.
"Oh, cool, a werewolf game! I'd Greenlight this because *werewolves*!"
Nope. Never give your vote to a Greenlight project just because the theme strikes your fancy. Look at the presented evidence: if it looks like a first-year project or quacks like a one-man team with close to zero animation or level design knowledge - then it probably *is* a shameless cash-grab. The whole Totalbiscuit debacle only supports that fact. No company would be so aggressive in their defense of a mediocre product if they were willing to acknowledge their mistakes. All FUN Creators wanted was an El Cheapo line to our wallets. That was denied to them.
With that in mind, I had zero expectations for Guise of the Wolf, which meant I slept very well at night.
As a cure for your odd "shitty games are shitty!" case of grumpiness, let me humbly suggest the offerings in the latest Indie Bundle - plus Ikaruga on Steam, if you've got another ten bucks burning a hole in your pocket. Guacamelee! is immensely worth it, Giana Sisters is entertaining enough, and Antichamber deserves at least one solid playthrough.