Connect with us
'Post Malone's Big Rig' #3 is a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight
Vault

Comic Books

‘Post Malone’s Big Rig’ #3 is a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight

Post Malone, Adrian Wassel, and Nathan Gooden push the grindhouse energy to its peak.

Big Rig #3 slams the brakes on subtlety and throws everything at the reader in a double-length barrage of demons, blood, and fire. The Rig is stuck, Minos’ army is swarming, and Trucker, Edda, and Batu are forced into an all-night war that feels more brutal and desperate with every page. And that’s just part one of a two-parter.

This series has always thrived on spectacle, but what makes this chapter hit harder is the cost of survival. The action is relentless in the first half, but it’s the toll it takes on the characters that lingers in the second half. It’s a surprising turn that completely upends the entire series.

Big Rig #3 opens with the truck stuck and the survivors digging in, holding out long enough to maybe survive the night. It’s a bit quiet, but the horde is coming, with most everyone knowing their numbers will thin out shortly. Edda and Batu man some serious modern weaponry, like a mounted machine gun and chainsaw, while Trucker gets into some familiar garb: chainmail with a sword to match. It’s Trucker’s weaponry, and look, that points this issue in a different direction, revealing details about him by the end that makes you look at him in a new light.

He’s also really good at cutting limbs off demon-infested humans.

'Post Malone's Big Rig' #3 is a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight

The action is fierce in the first half, with Gooden leaning into crazy chainsaw close-ups and blood splatter, even if the blood is black and white like most of this issue. What takes the cake is one of the biggy demons, this time looking like a giant bull. Gooden’s design sneaks up on you as its belly has a freakish surprise. From explosions to crow attacks, to 15-foot-tall baddies, there’s a lot to take in. Gooden makes the action feel relentless and the cost the heroes take heartfelt.

The second chapter is a bit of a jarring smash cut, with the rig in possession of some holier-than-thou types. Fear not, as all will be explained eventually. Frankly, the quick shift from action to calmer times helps keep the book interesting, while also focusing your attention on quieter dangers.

With action quiet in the second half, the real meat is with Trucker. We get a better sense of his past and what he’s about. He also has a new lease on pushing forward to help his friends. Throw in a wicked cliffhanger page with a gruesome sight from Hell itself, and it’s a great send-off until the next issue.

Post Malone, Adrian Wassel, and Nathan Gooden push the grindhouse energy to its peak here, making the battle feel like the kind of midnight comic you’d have sworn was too wild to exist until it did. Big Rig #3 is the series’ most ambitious entry in a few different ways, balancing grindhouse excess with surprising depth. The first half drenches readers in chainsaw-swinging carnage and demon mayhem, while the second half slows things down to reveal unexpected truths about Trucker and set up a haunting cliffhanger. It’s bold, bloody, and impossible to look away from – a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight.

'Post Malone's Big Rig' #3 is a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight
‘Post Malone’s Big Rig’ #3 is a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight
Post Malone's Big Rig #3
Post Malone, Adrian Wassel, and Nathan Gooden push the grindhouse energy to its peak here, making the battle feel like the kind of midnight comic you’d have sworn was too wild to exist until it did. Big Rig #3 is the series’ most ambitious entry yet, balancing grindhouse excess with surprising depth. The first half drenches readers in chainsaw-swinging carnage and demon mayhem, while the second half slows things down to reveal unexpected truths about Trucker and set up a haunting cliffhanger. It’s bold, bloody, and impossible to look away from—a midnight comic fever dream with real emotional weight.
Reader Rating2 Votes
9.2
Double-length format allows room for both nonstop, visceral action and meaningful character development.
Nathan Gooden’s art is unflinching, delivering grotesque, creative demon designs and gory spectacle.
Trucker’s past and identity get powerful new layers, recontextualizing the character and raising the stakes.
The abrupt transition between chapters can feel disorienting... probably on purpose.
9
Great
Buy Now

In Case You Missed It

Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026 Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026

Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026

Comic Books

Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers

Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers

Comic Books

Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy

Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy

Comic Books

DC Preview: Batman #10 DC Preview: Batman #10

DC Preview: Batman #10

Comic Books

Connect