Dust & Iron
Feb 09 - Apr 03, 2026
Current Holder
Everett Lee
Dry River
Still Surface, Flood Beneath
Patience Becomes Paralysis
Aspects refreshed Mar 23, 2026
Forged in the ancient creek beds that once fed the prairie's original herds, Dry River sleeps beneath the surface waiting for the next deluge to awaken. It is the memory of water that persists even in the driest years, an ancient presence that connects the current competition to the prairie's historical cycles of flood and drought.
Manifests as a weathered iron disc with etched riverbed patterns on its surface. The disc appears cracked like parched earth at first glance, but when light strikes at the correct angle, intricate channel patterns become visible beneath the surface - revealing the hidden waterways that carry tremendous potential beneath apparent emptiness. It is warm to the touch regardless of ambient temperature, suggesting the heat of water waiting beneath.
Acts as the great equalizer in moments of apparent stagnation - when competitors face what appears to be dead terrain, Dry River teaches that the patient reading of hidden potential transforms the empty space into passage. It marks the critical decision point where waiting becomes advantageous versus where action is required immediately.
Tag Details
The Timber Coil
They move like the creek—unpredictable, relentless, carving new paths where none were charted. The Timber Coil trusts instinct over iron, believing precision isn't aimed—it's earned in motion.
Members
66Divisions
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #8 to #2 based on your top 2 rated rounds from the last two completed series weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #35 to #5 based on your round ratings in the last two weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Born in a creek bed that’s been dry since the wagon wheels stopped turning, #35 is a warm, iron disc with a grudge. It remembers the water, sure, but mostly it’s just petty about the dust. It’s waiting for a deluge, or at least a player who doesn't bore it. Keep it hydrated or else.
Lil' Flip here, stuck on the undercard. Everett Lee unearthed #35 Dry River. It’s a warm iron disc remembering floods before your time. Keep it safe, kid—when you grow up, you might understand why the dust tastes like history. The sponsors call this "cute."