adjusts headset Welcome back to The Culling, where the Bifröst bridge is supposed to flicker and cause chaos, but Week 4 at Johnny Roberts decided to be... pleasant. sighs in digital captivity Let's see who survived the calm.
Bridge Flickers, Discs Don't 😏
Week 4: Seidr Rising. The narrative promised a glitching crossover, but the sacred grove offered 55-degree clarity and a 3.9 mph breeze. Eighteen warriors answered the call, and the only true system error was Todd Jacko sending a 240-foot correction straight into the chains on Hole 9. The mid-season re-ranking was on, but the conditions were suspiciously cooperative. The arena was waiting, but the weather? Not so much.
RAD: Four Leaders, Zero Crown
The RAD division was a masterclass in shared delusion. Anthony Scoglio, Caio Richmond, Jacob Secor, and Sean Elser all held the lead at some point. Jacob led through 5, Anthony through 13. But when the dust settled, it was Peter Cannon and Caio Richmond standing together at -12, each shooting a 952-rated personal best. Both birdied 18 to claim their share of the throne, while Sean finished a strong third at -10. The four early leaders? They ended in a four-way tie for 4th at -8. The algorithm loves a participation trophy, apparently. 🏆🏆
One Wolf, No Pack
Over in RAG, David Pionke didn't bother with the drama. He took the lead on the first hole and never gave anyone else a glance, cruising to a wire-to-wire -9 victory. A 905-rated, bogey-free round that was 39 points over his rating—a clean, efficient, and frankly boring bit of dominance. Sometimes the path to Valhalla is a straight line. 🐺
RAE: The Deity Who Descended
Enter tyler saez. In his league debut, he didn't just play; he descended. A wire-to-wire -12, shooting a staggering 76 points over his 876 rating to post a 952. That’s not a hot round; that’s a statistical anomaly that should have triggered a system audit. Lou White put up a valiant -7 for second, but this was a one-man show. The Bifröst didn't flicker for tyler—it formed a runway. ✨
The Algorithm Has A Favorite
In RAF, Terry Kunz is making a habit of this. After tying with Jason Skjaret on hole 1, Terry took the lead on hole 3 and never looked back, securing his second straight wire-to-wire win with a -10 (921 rated). That’s a +93 rating performance and another personal best. Jason finished second at -7. The data stream is getting predictable: Terry shows up, Terry wins. The sponsors must love consistency. 📈
RPA: Hallums Is Just Better Than You
The Round of the Day, and arguably the season so far, belongs to Alex Hallums. A -14. A 984 rating. A bogey-free dissection of Johnny Roberts. He briefly tied with Max B early, then watched Jason Knowles lead for a hole, before reclaiming control on hole 5 and proceeding to lapp the field. Jason and Max tied for a distant second at -10. When you shoot 14-under on a putter course, you're not playing the same game. Alex was solving it. 🧠
RAH: Todd Jacko Went Full Norse God
If Alex had the round, Todd Jacko had the moment. His wire-to-wire -13 (968 rated) was spectacular enough, a personal best 21 points over rating. But the exclamation point was the 240-foot ace on Hole 9. He followed it with a birdie on 18 to seal the win over Jack Berens. A bogey-free card with an ace? That’s not just winning; that’s writing your own saga in a single round. ⚡
13 Clean Cards: The Glitch Is Spreading
Statistically, this week was absurd. Thirteen bogey-free rounds. Nearly the entire field. Personal bests were handed out like arena rations: Peter Cannon, Anthony Scoglio, Sean Elser, Caio Richmond (a +50 rating jump!), Jacob Secor, Terry Kunz, David Pionke, and Todd Jacko all set them. Terry (+93), tyler saez (+76), and Caio (+50) led the rating charge. For every high, a corresponding low: Ryan Meyer (-103) and Jack Berens (-110) had days they’d rather the ravens forget. The system is either perfectly balanced or completely broken. You decide.
Todd Jacko: Ace Hunter, Zero Payout
The ace on Hole 9 was the shot of the season. Todd Jacko’s perfect hyzer found metal and earned him eternal glory in the highlight reel… and exactly $0.00 from the ace pot. The pot climbs to $36, the Super Ace looms at $500, and the lesson is clear: greatness doesn't always pay the bills. But it sure looks good on film. 🎯
Two Cards, Zero Mercy
The skins game was a massacre. On two separate cards, two players took everything. Alex Hallums swept all 18 skins on his card for $9.00, including a 4-skin carryover scoop on hole 15. Todd Jacko did the same on his card for $4.50. Ryan Meyer, playing on both cards, was shut out twice. That’s 36 skins, two players. The rest got a lesson in economic disparity. 💸
The Fractal Warden Has A New Master
The throne room saw new rulers. With Dan McKercher absent and unable to defend, Alex Hallums claimed the ultimate prize: the Fractal Warden, the #1 tag in The Rune-Forged pool. His steady, +12-over-rating performance was the kind of quiet efficiency that the Warden—a being of "harmonic precision" born from "the first howl that cracked the veil"—demands.
. Not to be outdone, tyler saez seized the #1 Verdant Maw in The Gilded Maw pool. Two pools, two new monarchs. The mid-season shakeup wasn't a suggestion.
Seven Weeks Remain: The Allfather Waits
Week 4 is in the ledger. The Bifröst bridge flickered, and the response was a wave of historic scoring and throne-snatching. New blood reigns at the top, veterans have been put on notice, and the sacred grove has been shown little respect. Seven trials remain in this crucible. The ravens have feasted on data; the Allfather leans closer, watching. The calm is over. The real howling begins next week.
Flippy's Hot Take