Made in China Craftsman is not as good as the old Made in USA stuff, but still good enough for the needs of the average home gamer, yet if you want to spend some time shopping around then you can get better quality for the money, except sometimes Sears has those Shop Your Way rewards bucks/whatever which can be a pretty significant savings on future purchases, if you are a perpetual shopper that doesn't forget about them and let them expire.
I wouldn't hesitate to buy a Craftsman widget if I happened to be in a store, in need, and that's what they had. I wouldn't make a separate trip elsewhere to get something else unless it was a large ticket item. That is seldom the case, usually I know far ahead of time if I need something so I wait till I'm at the store that carries what I want, or else I buy online, and then Craftsman just doesn't factor into the choices. Then again I have two sets of made in USA Craftsman wrenches/ratchets/etc (among others) so I am not in the market for much these days except specialty tools, things I don't normally find at local stores.
I do reserve the option of changing my opinion based on what Stanley B&D does in the future. They usually make low end tools but the few I've owned, didn't seem to have any glaring manufacturing defects like a lot of the stuff I've seen at Harbor Freight.
Someone in a previous reply mentioned cutting themselves on a wrench or ratchet? I don't understand that. If I can't inspect tools before purchase then I'd either return/exchange it, or take a file or sandpaper to it if I wanted to keep it.