Dave Mustaine just issued the ultimate thrash-metal olive branch—asking Metallica to join Megadeth’s farewell run, ending a 40-year rivalry that shaped the genre itself.
Dave Mustaine wants the last riff to be a harmony. The Megadeth mastermind told Revolver that his dying wish is a joint Megadeth-Metallica farewell tour—an ask that would rewrite heavy-metal history books overnight.
“That would, I’m sure, make everything right,” Mustaine said. “We could hang out. Spend time together.” Translation: the man Metallica fired in 1983 for erratic behavior is ready to close the circle, not with a grudge, but with a shared stage.
From Firing to Firepower: The Origin of the Feud
April 11, 1983. Metallica woke Mustaine on a New York squat floor, handed him a bus ticket, and severed the cord. Four days later, Kirk Hammett was cutting the Kill ’Em All solos that Mustaine had helped write. Instead of folding, Mustaine built Megadeth into a 50-million-album juggernaut that kept Metallica’s speed but added venomous technicality.
Albums like Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying? and Rust in Peace weren’t just revenge—they were receipts. For four decades, every down-picked riff was a reminder that the kid from the Bay Area exile had become thrash royalty in his own right.
Why Now? Sobriety, Survival, and Legacy
Mustaine’s plea arrives as Megadeth’s five-year farewell lap begins in February. After throat cancer, 20 years sober, and a self-titled swan-song that re-records his old Metallica co-write Ride the Lightning, the 64-year-old is in legacy mode.
“I wasn’t trying to do anything disrespectful,” he told Revolver. “This is me closing the circle, paying my respects.” The same hands that once wrote “Mechanix” as a middle finger to Metallica’s “The Four Horsemen” now extend a handshake.
What a Shared Stage Would Mean
- Historic First: No thrash “Big Four” package has ever paired the two alpha dogs on the same nightly bill.
- Set-List Shockwave: Imagine Tornado of Souls bleeding into Master of Puppets—a living timeline of metal’s evolution.
- Stadium Economics: Combined catalog depth guarantees sold-out NFL-sized venues for an entire year.
- Symbolic Closure: For fans who picked sides in 1986, it’s the ultimate cease-fire.
Metallica’s Move: Silence, But History Hints Possibility
Metallica has yet to respond publicly. Yet the band invited Mustaine onstage during their 30th-anniversary shows in 2011 and featured him in the Some Kind of Monster documentary—small cracks in a wall that’s already seen shared festival stages under the “Big Four” banner. With both bands managed by Q Prime and Live Nation circling any stadium payday, logistics aren’t the issue—ego is.
Fan Fallout: Ticket-Armageddon Incoming
Social metrics detonated within minutes of Mustaine’s quote. #Megatallica trended worldwide, Reddit threads calculated dream set-lists, and StubHub alerts spiked for every 2026 metal festival. If the tour materializes, expect record-breaking presales and a secondary-market frenzy that dwarfs 2023’s M72 double-header demand.
Final Verdict: The Reconciliation Metal Never Thought It Would See
A Megadeth-Metallia run isn’t just a nostalgia cash-grab—it’s the final chapter in the most influential rivalry the genre ever produced. For Mustaine, it’s absolution; for Metallica, a chance to rewrite their origin story from villain to ally; for fans, the ultimate validation that the riffs were always bigger than the grudges.
Keep your browser locked on onlytrustedinfo.com—we’ll be the first to confirm if the biggest thrash reunion ever leaps from wish to wristband.