
WP writes: "One part "Sin City," one part Smash TV and one part Streets of Rage, Madworld combines a striking visual style with intense violence and a simple goal: survive or die trying.
After the outbreak of a deadly virus, the citizens of Varrigan City found themselves cut off from the outside world and under a strict quarantine. Prompted by the chaos, unsavory power brokers founded "Death Watch," a new form of entertainment in which the citizens of Varrigan City fight for money, prizes and their very survival. For the contestants on Death Watch, losing is not an option.
Players enter the world of Varrigan City as Jack, an everyman who just so happens to have a chainsaw attached to his right arm. With a virtual army of bad guys in the way, it's up to you to rip, shred, maim, impale and otherwise eliminate the opposition as efficiently and creatively as possible. Sure, you can simply survive, but remember, you're on TV. To score the big money, you need to be as visceral as possible."
The motion-controlled maverick of a console that had everyone from age 9 to 99 swing a TV remote to bowl and painstakingly recreating themselves as Miis, had its share of hits, but even so, some titles didn’t quite get their due.

Beneath all the Smash and shovelware, the Wii really did have quite a few gems.
Not a bad list.. I would add Excitebots, Kororinpa 1 & 2, Bit.Trip series, Geometry Wars: galaxies

Keanu Reeves appearing in the trailer for Cyberpunk 2077 is far from the strangest celebrity video game appearance. Game Luster's Kate Mitchell highlights gaming's most unexpected voice acting moments.