Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Review: Did Dwight Just Make the Biggest Mistake Yet?

By Charles Martin 10/12/2025

Well, just when I thought Tulsa King couldn’t juggle any more drama without dropping a bottle of overpriced bourbon, Tulsa King season 3, Episode 4 hit like a bar brawl at closing time. This episode, titled Staring Down the Barrel, isn’t just a metaphor; it’s practically a mission statement. We’re four episodes in, and every character is now toe-to-toe with a decision that could blow back spectacularly.

And just when it seemed like Dwight (Sylvester Stallone) had a grip on the chaos, Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 proves that even the King can misfire. Every move he makes feels more desperate, more dangerous, and potentially more damaging. And while the bourbon might be missing, the drama is pouring fast. So… did Dwight just cross a line he can’t uncross?

Dwight Returns to Chaos in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4




Dwight walks back into town to find $150 million in bourbon missing and his team acting like unsupervised toddlers. The house isn’t just messy, it’s on fire. Metaphorically. (Barely.)

I liked how the show didn’t overplay Dwight’s anger. He’s not screaming, he’s simmering. And honestly, that’s more terrifying. Watching him hand out consequences without outright punishments, especially with Tyson, reminded me that this isn’t just a gangster story; it’s a twisted take on family values.

Tyson’s arc had me the most intrigued. There was growth, patience, and strategy. I know,  in this show, that’s practically saintly. Old Tyson would’ve rushed in fists-first. New Tyson, guided by Mark, thinks before making a move. That’s character development, and it hits the spot.

Bill’s Brutal Turn & Quiet Ray’s Creeping Influence in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4



Bill’s plotline went darker than I expected. What started as a confrontation ended with a body on the floor. And the worst part? I understood why it happened. That’s the genius of this writing: it puts you in uncomfortable shoes and dares you not to squirm.

Then enters Quiet Ray, a name that already gives me ulcers. Vince’s visit to him in New York felt like opening Pandora’s box. And when Ray sweet-talks Bill later, weaving family history into a velvet trap, I knew we were in deep. This is chess, not checkers, and someone’s about to get played hard.

Bodhi & Grace’s AI Hustle in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 is Equal Parts Brilliant & Bonkers




Actually, the whole AI influencer subplot is so on the nose, I almost choked on my coffee. Grace wants to launch a fake bourbon guru because, well, algorithms don’t get canceled. It’s clever, sure, but also gross. Also, there’s this ongoing thread about what’s real in Season 3, real loyalty, real relationships, real power.

And then there’s Bodhi, draining trucks digitally like it’s just business. It’s flashy. But it’s also built in the air. And air doesn’t hold weight for long. Call me old-fashioned, but when Grace brushed off ethical concerns with a smirk, I flinched. That kind of thinking never ends well. The grenade has already been planted; we’re just waiting for it to blow.

Family, Faith, and Firearms: The Montague 50 Stand-Off Unleashes Tulsa’s Brutal Heart

The stolen bourbon has become practically sacred, and the cost of getting it back? Flesh and blood. Jeremiah (Robert Patrick) trading Cole for the cask was cold and calculated, but layered with quiet heartbreak. You could feel the weight in his bones. This scene, for me, was the soul of the episode. Crime, legacy, sacrifice, all wrapped into one bitter exchange. And it made one thing clear: nobody’s safe. Not even family.

Jeremiah showed his hand. He’ll give up his son for the bigger picture and believe he can get him back later. That might be loyalty… or it might be delusion.

Margaret Makes Her Move: Love, Politics & Power Collide in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4

Margaret’s lunch with Neal McDonough’s Cal was pure strategy wrapped in charm. And Dwight? He felt it. This isn’t just business anymore. The man was one step away from smashing skulls over her. And for someone who’s built his life on being untouchable, that’s saying a lot.

Their late-night bed scene sealed it for me; these two are not just allies. They’re emotionally entangled, whether they admit it or not. Dwight talking about “people need[ing] people” might’ve been corny, but it was also one of the rawest lines he’s ever delivered. And I loved Margaret calling him on it with a laugh. That’s real intimacy.

Still, her political gamble with Cal might end up biting both of them. Dwight’s warning wasn’t just romantic jealousy; it was instinct. And Margaret’s no amateur, but in this game? Even seasoned players can get outplayed.

Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Ending Explained

By the end of Taylor Sheridan’s Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4, everything feels like it’s hanging by a thread. Dwight’s empire is expanding, sure, but at what cost? His people are fracturing, his enemies are circling, and he’s spreading himself too thin.

Margaret’s political play may buy her the ranch, but it risks lighting a fire under Dwight’s already unstable operation. And Tyson? He’s stepping into adulthood, finally understanding that sometimes real power lies in restraint.

The AI bourbon scheme and Quiet Ray’s whispers are just seeds now, but they’re going to grow into major problems. This episode didn’t just move the story forward; it cracked open the foundation. And I’m not convinced anyone’s ready for the fallout.

Is Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Worth a Watch?

Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 delivers sharp writing, layered character work, and a steady drip of tension that keeps you invested. It doesn’t rely on shock; it builds unease in the best way possible. Every decision made in this episode has weight. Every line feels like it could echo into next season.

There’s something deliciously exceptional about this show when it’s at its best, and this episode was one of its best. But what do you think? Is Margaret out of her depth or playing a longer game than we’re seeing? Did Dwight finally let his guard down too far? And will Bodhi and Grace’s digital dream come back to haunt them?

Sound off in the comments, I want to hear your theories.

Tulsa King Season 3 is currently streaming on Paramount+, with new episodes dropping weekly.

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