The Plain Dealer thought that "the band's irreverent sense of humor peeks through on pieces like 'The Surgeons', with its slinky, cinematic lounge music and its lyrics about plastic surgery."[5]
AllMusic wrote: "Gas Huffer's second album for Epitaph is as raw and raucous as their debut, but it benefits from an increased sense of songcraft that actually makes their warped garage-punk hit harder."[2]