With a title like “The G & The OG,” you know what we’re in for. Tyson wants to be the G, Dwight is the OG, and the gulf between them has never been more evident.
One’s all bravado, the other’s subtlety. One’s chasing clout, the other’s building an empire.
And Tusla King Season 3 Episode 3 makes sure we see the difference in the funniest — and most painful — ways possible.
This show has always been equal parts grit and ridiculousness, and comparing the G and the OG takes that to new heights.
It’s like someone turned the dial to eleven and broke it clean off. The episode delivers big laughs, brutal moments, and a reminder that Dwight’s empire is only as strong as the wildcards holding it up.
Let’s talk about Dwight’s so-called road trip with Musso.
The man practically gets shoved into a self-driving car, and it goes about as well as you’d expect. Dwight pulls his gun, yells at the thing to open the door, and instead it cranks up Nas. So Dwight shoots the console.
Because of course he does. And I don’t blame him. I enjoy AI, but with my life? That’s a harder sell. And Dwight’s reaction is exactly what you’d expect him to do when faced with modern tech. He’s still learning after 25 years in the slammer!

The guy can bribe a cop without breaking a sweat, but a Tesla? Forget it. I’d watch a whole spinoff of Dwight vs. smart gadgets.
And then there was the traffic stop after Dwight repeatedly told Musso to slow the hell down. Musso was just too powerful to listen to the OG. Well, that didn’t work out so well for him, did it?
Musso flashed his badge like that was going to matter, but Dwight’s the one who smoothed it over by offering the deputy Thunder tickets for his kids.
That moment said everything: Musso talks power, Dwight shows it. You could see Musso’s wheels turning.
He thought he was running Dwight, but now he knows Dwight is the guy who can get things done. And Dwight clocked that Musso may be pliable enough to turn into a future asset. That’s Dwight’s whole playbook: turn enemies into allies, stack favors until you own the board.

Somewhere between the Nas-blaring car ride and the Thunder-ticket bribe, Dwight and Musso’s “team-building” trip turns deadly serious.
Their target, Dexter Deacon — a.k.a. The Watchmaker — is more than another criminal. He’s the kind of man who kills anyone, anywhere, for the right price. Musso swears it’s a sanctioned job, but Dwight knows better; this feels personal.
When they finally meet Deacon, played by Dallas Roberts (who you’ve seen in The Good Wife, Big Sky, and half the crime dramas on television), the tension spikes.
Dwight’s supposed to pose as a buyer, but even he can sense the setup is dangerous. Deacon clocks him immediately, testing him with small talk that feels like a trap. And you can see it on Dwight’s face — this gig isn’t worth whatever Musso thinks he owes him.
The whole thing feels bigger than one assignment. Musso keeps saying it’s about “justice,” but the way he hides behind Dwight makes it look a lot more personal — and a lot more reckless.

Honestly, I can’t help wondering if The Watchmaker is a preview of the next big arc. A hitman with no code, a fed using Dwight as cover, and a mission that clearly isn’t on the books? That’s more than a side plot. It’s groundwork for a future storyline.
If Tulsa King keeps expanding its world, this Texas thread could explode into next season’s major storyline.
Back in Tulsa, Tyson, Bodhi, and Grace… oh boy. Who surveils someone in a Cybertruck?
That thing sticks out like a UFO on Main Street. Bodhi wasn’t wrong — the Wienermobile would’ve been less conspicuous. And then they follow Cole into his “big operation,” only to find themselves in a bingo hall full of senior citizens.
I was cackling. You’ve got mob kids trying to act slick while retirees shout about missed numbers. It was like watching Goodfellas crash into Golden Girls.
And here’s the kicker — it wasn’t just a gag. Goodie shows up and calls it: Cole’s not just calling numbers, he’s running a con. He plants ringers so the real players never win, skims the pot, and keeps the money flowing.

That’s why Tyson winning was such a big deal. It wasn’t just luck. It was them telling Cole, “We see you.” Which is exactly why the whole thing blew up in their faces.
Speaking of faces — Tyson. He wants so badly to be a gangster that he forgets subtlety.
When Cole finally grabs him, Tyson takes the punches, laughs like a madman, and for a hot second, I thought, “Okay, maybe he’s got it.”
And then they drag in the stripper he thought he had a connection with. Gun to her head. How many men in history have thought, This one’s different, she really gets me?
Tyson cracked. He had to. It wasn’t about him anymore — it was about her. And in that moment, he gave up the Montague 50.

Cole walks away like he won the lottery, and Dwight’s empire takes its first big hit.
Tyson only survives because the Cybertruck is bulletproof — which is hilarious in a “thank God” way, but doesn’t erase the mistake.
And this is the thing about Tyson: he wants to wear the crown, but he doesn’t get that Dwight’s game is subtlety. Dwight bribes cops with basketball tickets.
Tyson barges into bingo halls and falls for strippers. One path builds an empire. The other gets you made.
Dwight will forgive him — he always does — but how many more times can Tyson’s green arrogance put the family in a bind before Dwight’s patience runs out?
Joanne had her hands full when Clara arrived at the distillery — Armand’s wife, the very woman he was supposed to be with in the Rockies.

And Dwight believed that. He wanted it to be true. He needed it to be true because Armand was supposed to be proof that people could get a second chance and walk away.
Clara blows that illusion to bits. If she doesn’t know where her husband is, nobody does. Which means someone else has him.
And Joanne feels it too. She can’t understand why Dwight’s acting cagey, not knowing Musso has him on a leash.
To her, it just looks like Dwight’s letting something slide, and she’s not buying it. That’s a storm brewing, even if Dwight doesn’t see it yet.

And then there’s Chloe, who nearly torches Jeremiah’s house.
That wasn’t just some wild impulse — it was her grief exploding. Her dad’s dead. The distillery she loved is now mob property. Mitch is back in her life, stirring up all the old stuff she never resolved.
Of course she’s unraveling.
And that makes her dangerous. She’s not malicious, but she’s a wildcard. If Mitch doesn’t calm her down, she could blow the whole operation without meaning to do it.
Meanwhile, Dwight and Margaret are talking about Cal Thresher’s run for governor.

The guy wanted to be king of Tulsa’s little pond until Dwight unsettled his world with barely a flick of the wrist. But his own right-hand nearly stole it all in that Season 2 shootout. Can you imagine him as governor?
He’s ambitious but not exactly smooth. Right now, the winds aren’t blowing his way, but Dwight sees the bigger play: with Margaret’s help, Cal could be governor.
Imagine Dwight with a governor in his pocket. That’s chess while everyone else is playing bingo. Margaret’s stepping closer into Dwight’s world, and he may not even realize how far he’s letting her in.
Throw in Chloe’s Molotov cocktail tantrum at Jeremiah’s, Goodie playing the smartest man in the bingo hall, and Musso watching Dwight work magic like he’s never seen before — this episode was stacked.

At the end of the day, Tulsa King Season 3, Episode 3 is the show at its best: hilarious one minute, dangerous the next.
Dwight’s empire is shaking. The Montague 50 is gone. Tyson’s still trying to act gangsta without the wisdom to back it up.
Armand’s missing, Margaret’s scheming, Musso might be an ally in disguise. And Chloe’s a firebrand just waiting for the wrong spark.
We’re watching it all, just like we’re on the couch with a friend, pointing at the screen and saying, “Did that really just happen?”
Yeah. It did. And we can only imagine that Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 is only going to rock the boat even more.

And that’s the point of “The G & The OG.” Tyson may want to be the G, but Dwight is still the OG.
Tyson’s all flash and bulletproof Cybertrucks; Dwight’s bribing deputies and plotting governors. One’s playing checkers, the other’s playing chess.
Until Tyson learns the difference, Dwight’s empire will always wobble — but it’ll never topple. Because there’s only one OG in Tulsa, and it sure as hell isn’t Tyson.
It’s your turn! Jump into the comments below, and let’s talk it out. And if you’re looking, we also have a Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 3 Recap without all the commentary.
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The post Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 3 Review: The G & The OG Pits Tyson’s Bravado Against Dwight’s Subtlety appeared first on TV Fanatic.