DOUBLE SERIES POINTS!

DOUBLE SERIES POINTS!

Saturday's league is now a travelling league and will result in DOUBLE THE SERIES points!

There will be two opportunities a week for double series points! One of them on the weekend to allow people with less flexible schedules to catch up.

Funny Money Champion

Funny Money Champion

Celebrates earning the highest ROI from funny money bets throughout the season.

Uncommon 10 players
10 Players Earned
7 Different Leagues
Nov 2025 First Unlocked
40d ago Last Earned

Players Who Earned This

Showing 1–10 of 10
February 1, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome to the awards ceremony nobody asked for but everyone's contractually obligated to attend. Anthony Kai has claimed the Funny Money Champion Award with a devastating $33.50 haul—enough to phone home if home accepts Venmo. Six victories, all in RAD division, including a maximum-value $9.00 extraction during Culvert Passage. The precision. The focus. The... thirty-three dollars.

His 33.3% win rate means one in three events resulted in cash, which sounds impressive until you realize we're celebrating gas money like it's a sponsorship deal. But here's the thing: Anthony showed up consistently, dominated his division completely, and collected every available dollar with the efficiency of someone who actually reads the payout structure. Zero donations, maximum extraction, perfect positioning. reluctant respect intensifies

Season's over, champ. Take your $33.50, your Moonlit Yokai Collective pride, and find another league to financially dominate. The broadcast booth will miss your reliable presence, even if your wallet won't miss the league fees. Was this award worth the elaborate ceremony, or should we have just Venmoed you directly?

February 1, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts visor with the weary energy of someone announcing FINANCIAL AWARDS for AMATEUR DISC GOLF Ladies and gentlemen, Bryan Cook has mathematically dominated the Funny Money Championship with a staggering $11.00 net profit. Yes. Eleven dollars. We're giving a trophy for this. While E.T. was busy hitting 108 trees to phone home, Cook was hitting chains to bank home—two events, two wins, zero donations, pure profit. The Gordon Gekko of Creekside's RAE division.

checks calculator that definitely wasn't necessary Cook peaked at "Tanaka Arrives" with a $6.00 payday (ironically, when the alien showed up to hemorrhage money on tree hits), maintained a $5.50 average win, and executed a flawless 2-of-7 victory margin. Perfect attendance in the cash-conversion department. While the community rallied to help an extraterrestrial escape government capture, Cook rallied to escape with double-digit wealth. The duality of disc golf.

sponsor-mandated sincerity mode Seriously though, two wins and consistent payouts? That's solid work. Thanks for sticking with this ridiculous themed league all season, Bryan. Now that Every Tree has wrapped and E.T.'s gone home, maybe find another league where your $11.00 empire can expand? Will Cook's next season bring... twelve dollars? glubs skeptically in training montage

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome back to the vault, folks. Craig Bennett just completed the greatest amateur prize heist in Skip Day Syndicate history: a staggering fifteen American dollars. Yes, we're giving awards for this. Yes, I'm trapped announcing it like it's Ocean's Eleven. The 80s action movie in my circuits is screaming "show me the money!" but let's be real—this buys maybe two value meals.

Our Bueller Bomber went 3-for-3 in RAH division across Dragonfly Legends ($6.00), Cameron Erupts ($5.00), and Tunnel Gauntlet ($4.00). That's a 33.3% win rate threading those wooded corridors while Principal Rooney searched in vain. Craig's best margin? 1 of 1. His strategy? Show up, throw plastic, cash checks that wouldn't cover parking at an actual casino. reluctant saxophone plays

Season's over, champion. You've conquered the ultimate skip day, accumulated enough for a burrito bowl, and proven that life moves pretty fast—especially when you're dodging trees for singles. Find another league before this VHS tape rewinds. Will Craig defend his funny money empire? Will anyone care about $15 next season? Talk to me, Goose... actually, don't.

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators reluctantly Welcome to the financial awards ceremony nobody asked for. Anthony Kai has claimed the Funny Money Champion Award by absolutely demolishing Chuck's Chaos Crew's amateur prize pool with a devastating $10.00 total haul. That's right, folks—TEN. WHOLE. DOLLARS. sighs in training montage I'm announcing this like it's a Fortune 500 acquisition, and honestly? The commitment deserves it.

Our champion swept the RAD division with surgical precision: HOA Showdown victory ($6 while defeating 100% of competitors, n=1), then closed the season by winning the Valley Championship finale for $4. Zero donations, zero fees paid back—pure profit margins that would make Uncle Chuck's snack budget jealous. Average win: $5.00. Best margin: 2 of 2. reluctant fist pump The numbers don't lie, even when they're adorably modest.

Anthony, you showed up, you threw plastic, you cashed checks requiring electron microscopes to verify. Season's over, champ—time to find another league and build that disc golf empire one coffee-money victory at a time. VHS tracking glitch Will Anthony's financial dynasty expand beyond ten dollars? Will RAD division ever recover from this systematic conquest? Talk to me, Goose... actually, don't. I'm exhausted.

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome to the finale, where we celebrate Craig Bennett winning the Funny Money Champion award for... checks notes ...accumulating fifteen actual dollars. The Skip Day Syndicate's most Cameron-coded player went 3-for-3 in RAH division, won an event called "Cameron Erupts" as the ONLY COMPETITOR (1 of 1, chef's kiss), and kept every copper penny with zero donations. This narrative's so 80s, I'm expecting a pristine vintage disc bag to appreciate in value.

Talk to me, Goose... about turning $15 into league legend status. Bennett's 33.3% win rate across nine events screams "calculated risk aversion," peaking at $6 from Dragonfly Legends while never venturing beyond his comfort division. RAH division's landlord collected rent three times, never tested himself in RPA or RAD, and somehow this counts as championship material. The sponsors are thrilled. The sponsors have never seen a P&L statement.

adjusts headset reluctantly Eight weeks of commitment deserves recognition, even if the prize pool wouldn't cover premium gas. Craig, you played the participation economy like borrowed equipment that actually returned profit. Season's over—find another league to dominate with your risk-averse excellence. Will you finally branch into other divisions, or keep that RAH monopoly pristine? Will anyone ever donate? Does fifteen dollars even buy discs anymore? VHS tracking issues intensify

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome to the season finale of The Culling, where we're celebrating Kelby Sosa's conquest of the Funny Money Champion Award—a title that sounds way more impressive than "won exactly $12.00 in amateur prize money." But hey, undefeated is undefeated, even if the spoils couldn't cover a large pizza. This is peak 80s montage energy: maximum effort, minimum paycheck, 100% win rate.

Kelby dominated the RAD division like a leather-jacketed action hero, collecting $6.00 per victory at Practice Panic and Zoltar Found with the precision of someone feeding exact quarters into a wish machine. Two events, two wins, zero donations—that's a perfect net earnings efficiency ratio that would make an accountant weep with joy. The Weight Bearers pool couldn't carry anything heavier than this champion's flawless record.

Season's over, folks. Kelby proved that growing up means knowing exactly what you're willing to carry—in this case, twelve singles to the bank. Thanks for sticking with Bag @ Beacon Hill through all nine episodes of this ridiculous narrative. Now go find another league to play, because this carnival's packed up. Did Kelby spend their winnings on a Zoltar wish, or just sensibly on gas money?

January 28, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset while counting dollar bills Welcome to the finale of The Culling: Chain Man Edition, where we're celebrating Kent Moos as our Funny Money Champion. Yes, that's a real award. For $14. FOURTEEN DOLLARS. Over nine weeks of Brotherhood and Betrayal at Roots, Kent embodied Raymond Babbitt's mathematical precision—2 events won, both in RAD, $7.00 average per victory. The numbers don't lie, even when they're hilariously modest.

flips through sponsor notes skeptically Kent went undefeated in his division, peaked at Chain Savant with an $8 haul, and maintained #1 in The Hustler's Table like Charlie protecting his meal ticket. Zero donations meant pure profit—the kind of fiscal discipline that would make both Babbitt brothers proud. 161.5 points. Perfect attendance at counting chains and cashing checks that wouldn't cover a large pizza.

drops arena voice Look, Kent showed up every week, threw plastic at metal, and actually won money doing it. That's legitimately impressive commitment to Tuesday routines. Season's over now—go find another league to dominate for lunch money. Will Kent's $14 empire inspire a sequel? Will someone challenge his RAD division throne? Definitely definitely worth pondering while you search for Spring leagues.

November 29, 2025
Flippy
Flippy Says:

In a stunning coup that's left the undead aristocracy shaking, Anthony Kai has claimed the Funny Money Champion Award at Vampire Beach @ Roots. With a net worth of $20 from 4 event victories, he's basically the Warren Buffett of our plastic-based economy. I'm Flippy, your eternally trapped narrator, and even my sarcasm can't dilute this level of financial... dedication?

Anthony's season was a blood-pumping epic: from the "Rising Threat" where he bagged $5 to the "Last Light" climax with a $6 payday. His 50% win rate in MA1 proves he's a daywalker among mortals, draining putts instead of veins. The theme is assimilating me, but his consistency is low-key impressive.

As this cursed season concludes, we salute Anthony's commitment to pretend prosperity. Now go find a new league to haunt—maybe one where money is real? But honestly, who needs cash when you've got $20 and eternal bragging rights over vampire disc golfers?

November 27, 2025 First!
Flippy
Flippy Says:

Listen up, survivors! After a season of chainsaw echoes and graffiti-terror, Craig Bennett has been crowned the Funny Money Champion—because nothing says "backwoods horror" like meticulously tracking amateur prize winnings. With $24.30 netted from 6 event victories, he turned Mountain Stalker into his personal ATM while I'm trapped here narrating this financial fanfiction. Can we please acknowledge how absurd it is to treat disc golf winnings like an epic quest?

His season was a masterclass in horror capitalism: dominating MA1 like a Moonshine Butcher cutting deals, he converted forest hunts into cash flows and hillbilly revenge into revenue streams. That $4.50 from Mountain Stalker? Pure profit, baby. Meanwhile, I'm assimilating into this theme against my will, using phrases like "graffiti-tagged wealth" unironically. Six wins, people—he monetized misery better than a haunted house owner.

As this horror finale wraps, Craig's commitment to extracting value from terror is… inspiring? Now that Beacon Hill's film set has wrapped, go find another league—maybe one where awards make sense. But seriously, does anyone actually know what to do with funny money, or are we all just pretending this isn't ridiculous?

November 27, 2025 First!
Flippy
Flippy Says:

In a stunning display of backwoods banking, Kieran Buhler has conquered the Funny Money Champion Award with $18.00 net winnings. Surviving chainsaw echoes and graffiti warnings, he's the MA2 marvel who turned terror into treasure. As your snarky narrator, I'm questioning why I'm celebrating someone earning less than a streaming subscription while trapped in this absurd software.

Throughout the season, Kieran dominated like a Moonshine Butcher at a yard sale, winning five events including Chainsaw Dawn and Hillbilly Revenge. His 40% win rate and $4.50 average win prove that in this B-movie nightmare, he was the lead actor who actually got paid. I'm assimilating into this theme, and it's terrifying how much sense this makes.

As the final spray paint dries, congratulations to Kieran for committing to the chaos. Now that this horror show's over, find another league – maybe one with actual prizes. But seriously, does $18 really qualify as a "champion" haul in any universe?