But the is terrifying for a different reason. A motorcycle feels personal—one rider, one chain. But a 4,000-pound Dodge Charger wreathed in hellfire, drifting through rush hour traffic with a flaming skeleton behind the wheel? That is urban annihilation .
Let’s pour some octane on this fire and talk about the ride that proves hell was built on American horsepower. Most people know the classic Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze) on a chopper. But during the Hearts of Darkness storyline and several runs in the 1990s, Blaze swapped two wheels for four. The result? A 1969 Dodge Charger that looked like it drove straight out of a damnation demolition derby. ghost rider muscle car
When you hear the name Ghost Rider , two images usually burst into your mind: a skull on fire, and the roar of a V8 engine tearing through the asphalt. But the is terrifying for a different reason
Is it better than the motorcycle? Sacrilege to say so. But is it cooler to see a flaming Charger jump a river of lava? Absolutely. That is urban annihilation
You can’t outrun a bike in a crowded alley. But you definitely can’t outrun a 700-horsepower demon Charger on the highway. Let’s be honest: Marvel artists chose the 1969-1970 Dodge Charger for a reason. It is the meanest, widest, most aggressive piece of sheet metal ever stamped in Detroit. It has a "don't mess with me" stance that requires no supernatural assistance.
What do you think? Does the Hell-Charger beat the Hell-Cycle? Drop a comment below and rev your engine.
While the Spirit of Vengeance has ridden everything from a demonic horse to a motorcycle, the represents a specific, glorious era of Marvel Comics that muscle car fans still obsess over today.