If the 338 rang your bell the real cartridges would probably kill you. In truth there are those who like the bullpups and those who don't and they're all entitled to their opinions. If you don't like them then its not a problem. Makes more for us. I've noticed the 33 XC has a lot more poop then the 338 Lapua when it comes to recoil but the noise level seems the same to me.....maybe it has something to do with me using my same suppressor on both.
So far as I've seen there is no real basis to the fear of bullpups being more likely than standard actions for blowing your face off. I've never seen an action shatter in all the years I've been shooting and only a couple barrels split in that 40+ years due to obstructions or other reasons. I find I worry more about my 50 caliber Boys anti-tank rifle with its standard non bullpup action than I do about the Desert Tactical. However as we all have our own fears and concerns I leave each to their own.
I have felt that my MDR is louder than the bolt action SRS but I'm sure its due to gas being dumped by the piston ports and the chamber when it uncorks the spent case. It is no louder than an AR however and in my opinion its not as loud. I always shoot suppressed (in the AR's too) unless its not legal so that may have something to do with it.
Frank
I've got quite a few bullpups now, but find I like them less and less the more I shoot. I LOVE the weight balance when shooting off-hand, and obviously the shorter OAL, but ergonomics are always a challenge. I've got some of the fun ones (Kel-Tec RFB, AUGs, have had DT SRS, etc) and at the end of the day, there's issues with the magazine location even with a lot of use, for _me_. That's highly personal, just like stocks on traditional rifles. Sometimes, the weight balance is worth the trade-off in ergo, sometimes not. I'm still not sure which I prefer!
I wanted to reply not just to interject my opinion, but also to interject a little fact regarding the design. I don't worry about bullpups and action explosions (even if it were to happen, which is exceedingly unlikely; even pistol powder in a rifle case tends to break bolts, not explode actions), because many of the bullpup manufacturers have reinforced the area where your cheek/face is above the action with steel, to force the blast elsewhere. Some add steel plate, some just build super beefy receivers/etc.
I've seen bullpup failures of assorted types, and generally all that you see is magazine exploding outwards (baseplates/etc). I've not seen any squib loads in a bullpup, but I suspect it'd be no different than what you see in a traditional rifle - kiss the barrel goodbye, maybe some bolt damage, but otherwise ok. Taking the AUG for example, I'm not sure if there's been a single catastrophic failure of one since it entered military service. The worst I've ever heard of was an ejection port cover blowing off (gas escaping, again, path of least resistance).
I'm sure some exist that aren't as safe, but most of of the bullpups you think about are over-engineered from a safety perspective for exactly the concerns brought up - nobody, to include the manufacturers of these, wants anyone to be injured by a preventable failure. That would be a game-over moment for the company involved.