[3] Ultimately the record did not chart as well as did contemporaneous albums by label mates such as The Offspring and Rancid, despite selling modestly well by punk rock standards.
[5] They spent 1994 touring heavily with groups like Bad Religion and Green Day, including stints with road manager and future guitarist Randy Steffes, and planning a follow-up record.
Writing a retrospective review for AllMusic, Vincent Jeffries called the album a "rewarding" effort in which "the group offers a more familiar [...] sound" than on their previous record.
"[9] CMJ's Juliana Day gave the album a positive review, calling the record "one adrenaline burst after another, prefabricated but easy to bang your head to.
"[10] Calgary-based punk band Julius Sumner Miller later covered "Drunk on a Bike",[12] recording it for their 2021 album Try It Out in the months after Chinn's death.