No, it's not. Not even compared to other Transformers titles.
Look man, IDW burned me out in IRL politics by making every Autobot prior to Optimus a fascist, using the Decepticons as a Soviet Communism allegory, and James Roberts working out his issues with the state of British socialism via a reformed Megatron that basically just served as his mouthpiece.
I let politics dominate my life too much as is and I suppose IDW1's take was super interesting and fresh when I was in my 20s and the idea that a thing I liked as a kid could have IRL political allegories was mind blowing, but I'm 36 now. I've had enough. If I want to be depressed about politics I'll doomscroll Twitter thankyouverymuch. I'm looking for something else out of TF comics, and SB and DWJ's giving it to me.
My favourite parts of this issue were Optimus, Carly, Spike, and Cliffjumper talking in the woods.
Hardly an all action/nothing else ride, is it?
If your main issue is that you're upset PEOPLE ARE ENJOYING IT WRONG then the problem's with you.
IDW never figured out what they wanted Optimus to be. The entire continuity was making a very black and white concept (
Autobots wage their battle to destroy the evil forces of the Decepticons! ) very grey. Which I loved until I didn't.
But big picture Optimus isn't a grey character. He's always the moral centre of the cast. Prime being a hero, and an empathetic leader, is central to the story. IDW's various creative teams all tried their own takes on it, and it seems what Barber and Roberts ended on (since they got to land the plane, and their run is probably the most synonymous with the continuity) was that he was basically a good guy but haunted by the legacy of corrupt Primes. He was an atheist who resisted religion despite claiming a title that was religious in nature, and disliked the blind loyalty some had towards him because of that title while also cynically using it to advance what he saw as the greater good.
None of this is bad, mind you. Divorce it from Optimus Prime, hell from Transformers in general, and you have the makings of a good reluctant protagonist.
But as Optimus Prime... it was lacking? And it was hard to figure out why it never really clicked like a lot of other characters IDW wrote did, but then when compared to this take it's like night and day.
DWJ gets why Optimus Prime is Optimus Prime and why that matters. He's compassionate and empathetic and if even a simple animal is hurt on his account because he didn't think something through he will feel bad about it. This is the guy who sees life and earnestly believes "freedom is the right of all sentient beings," no matter what.