I don't see why not.
Wolf-brand ammo has been a reliable, reasonably consistent "everyday" kind of ammo for shooting tin cans, paper targets, etc. It's not match ammo, nor should one expect it to be.
I have heard of the occasional ammo-related failure in various guns (this happens with a lot of ammo brands, not just Wolf), and Wolf has been known to either replace all the suspected bad ammo at their cost, refund the buyer if they don't want replacement ammo, and replace any broken gun (happened with at least one AK that I've read about).
People have been shooting a brazillion rounds of Wolf every year for years now. If it were truly a dangerous and unsafe cartridge, there would be far more horror stories about it than the few anecdotes that are going around (many of which dealt with the older Wolf ammo with a lacquered case and red sealant around the case neck -- newer poly-coated ammo without the neck sealant is significantly better).