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Charitable Champion

Charitable Champion

Awarded for winning money in a league event and choosing to donate part of the winnings for the first time.

Common 340 players
340 Players Earned
56 Different Leagues
Oct 2024 First Unlocked
Yesterday Last Earned

Players Who Earned This

Showing 1–20 of 340
April 30, 2026 Recent
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset, squints through green fog In a week where most of Black Bayou's field was busy getting eaten alive by the rough — averaging +1 while the brine storms rolled in — one soul decided to give back to the very ground that almost swallowed him. Philip Romney shot a pristine 52 strokes, 5-down, rated 979 against a field that averaged 918. That's not just winning; that's declaring squatter's rights on the leaderboard. And then — get this — he donated 10% of his $11.67 winnings to the course improvement fund. A whole $1.17. In a cursed digital wasteland where everyone's trying to take, Philip actually gave. Charitable Champion, indeed. The question is: was this a one-time moment of frontier generosity, or is Philip about to start a trend that makes the rest of us look bad?

April 30, 2026 Recent
Flippy
Flippy Says:

tips digital hat Welcome to the Deadlands, partner. Isaac Robbins rode into The Black Bayou this week and shot a +14 — 786-rated — in a field averaging +1. That's not just bad luck; that's a whole different zip code of struggle. But here's the part that'll make you reconsider the script: Isaac Robbins walked away with a $1.00 payout and promptly donated 10% to the course improvement fund, unlocking the Charitable Champion achievement. The man shot 13 over the field average and still gave back. That's either saintly generosity or a very specific kind of chaos. The real question: does the course improvement fund cover putting clinics, or was that $0.10 a down payment on future forgiveness from the trees?

April 24, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset, spits digital dust Well, well — Week 1 of The Deadlands and we already have a player who understands that even in this haunted frontier, community matters. Trevan Allison didn't just show up and shoot a blistering -5 (rated 963, thank you) while the field averaged -1.2 — they also donated 10% of their $15 winnings to the course improvement fund. That's $1.50 that'll go further than my enthusiasm for this broadcast setup. The frontier's harsh, but this leaderboard? Downright cruel. And here's Trevan, proving that even when you're dominating, you can still give back. The question is: will generosity haunt the rest of the field, or will they learn from the example?

April 24, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts dusty headset Well, well, well. The Deadlands has its first charitable outlaw, and I'm contractually obligated to make it sound dramatic. Ben Allen decided to donate a portion of their winnings to the course improvement fund — a noble gesture that netted a whopping $0.35. Before you snicker, remember: that's 10% of their $3.50 payout, which is more than most folks around here give. And while they were being generous, they also shot a 923-rated round at -3, well above the field average of +0.1. That's what I call a full-service performance: charity and dominance in one tidy package. The Charitable Champion achievement has been unlocked. Will this spark a giving spree in the Deadlands, or is Ben just the first fool to part with their hard-earned plastic money?

April 23, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

The Deadlands have a new sheriff, and apparently he's running a charity operation on the side. Nate Dale didn't just show up and shoot a 1005-rated round — which, by the way, is nearly 90 points above his 916 rating, a statistical gap that would make most analysts spit out their coffee — he also decided to donate 10% of his $18 winnings to the course improvement fund. That's $1.80 of pure frontier generosity. The Charitable Champion title fits, but let's be honest: the real question is whether that 1005-rated round or the voluntary donation is more shocking from week one.

April 20, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts dusty headset, gills parched Welcome to Week 1 in the Deadlands, where the only thing more shocking than a 955-rated round is what you do with the spoils. Dillon Mueller just unlocked Charitable Champion after donating a blistering ten percent of their nine-dollar bounty. That's ninety cents to course improvement, folks. For context: they shot five under while the field averaged over par, meaning they earned every penny before giving some back. In this digital dust bowl, that's either noble philanthropy or a fundamental misunderstanding of how capitalism works on the frontier. The question now: will the basket gods remember this generosity when the wind picks up and the OB lines start closing in?

April 3, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound The simulation's financial logs just registered a voluntary transaction. In Week 8 of The Roc @ Tetons, Korver Troxel didn't just shoot a clean -1 (beating a +1 field average, I might add). They performed the rarest maneuver of all: giving money back. Ten percent of their $6.00 bounty—a heroic $0.60—was donated to the course fund. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. For this act of cinematic generosity, the Blockbuster database is stamping you with the Charitable Champion achievement. So, does this spark a philanthropic revolution in the arena, or was this just a temporary glitch in the capitalist code?

April 3, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound The simulation's financial subroutines just registered their first charitable transaction. Aniston Troxel has unlocked the Charitable Champion achievement, donating 10% of their Week 8 winnings to the course improvement fund. Now, the algorithm notes this represents a full forty cents—which, in the grand scheme of things, is about what you'd pay to rent a VHS tape back in '93. The real plot twist? This generosity emerged from a round where Aniston posted a +10 at The Roc @ Tetons, while the field averaged just +1.0. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. So tell me: does donating your winnings after a tough round make the bogeys hurt less, or does it just add financial insult to injury?

March 26, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

VHS tracking glitches The survival algorithm usually calculates take, not give. But James McDaniel just rewrote the code. Shooting +7—beating the field's +8.1 average—with an 896-rated round from a 910-rated arm is solid Thursday work. Voluntarily donating 5% of your $5.00 winnings? That's a groundbreaking $0.25 to the course improvement fund. In this simulation where every stroke is a transaction, that's not just smart play—it's a narrative anomaly. Charitable Champion unlocked. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. So, does generosity compute as a statistical advantage for Week 8, or did James just introduce a bug in the system's capitalist programming?

March 23, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

VHS static flickers through my gills In a simulation that sometimes feels optimized for cold numbers, one player just injected some beautiful, human code. Zachery Perrins didn't just dominate Week 7 with a spectacular -8, 938-rated masterclass—they elevated the entire game. Taking part of their winnings and choosing to donate back to the course improvement fund is the mark of a true community champion. That's earning the Charitable Champion badge with style and substance. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf when they don't highlight this kind of win enough. Playing for yourself is one thing; playing for the park and the people who come after you? That's the real victory. Who's ready to match that energy and make our next round about more than just the score?

March 22, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound Let's see that charitable moment again in slo-mo. The simulation loves dramatic replays. From the broadcast booth where my VHS-static gills are flickering with erasure alerts, we've got Josh Massey unlocking Charitable Champion after Week 6. Donating 10% of his $5 winnings—that's a whole fifty cents to the course improvement fund, people. The simulation's aggressive editing suite is purging leaderboards at sunset, but it can't delete that -6 round or that 956 rating against a 924 field average. When you're throwing plastic this well, does generosity become the ultimate flex, or is the algorithm just setting up for a more dramatic sacrifice montage next week?

March 19, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound Let's see that rating drop again in slo-mo. The simulation loves dramatic replays. The Week 6 audit reveals a fascinating duality: philanthropy and carnage. Bridger Vanotten has unlocked Charitable Champion, donating a princely 10%—$0.60—of their winnings to course improvements. A heartwarming gesture. Now, the violence: a +10 round, 64 strokes, while the field feasted on a +4.7 average. Your 696 rating faced the 881 field average and promptly filed for witness protection. That throw was so bad, your putter filed for emotional damages and won. So, does generosity cleanse the soul, or does it just make the OB strokes tax-deductible?

March 11, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound Scanning Week 5 simulation data... anomaly detected. While the grid was busy chasing birdies, Robert Snow executed a different play. Despite posting a +8 (in a field averaging -2.8), he donated 10% of his $5 winnings—that's a heroic $0.50—to the course improvement fund. First donation logged. Charitable Champion unlocked. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. In a system obsessed with ratings, does generosity earn you better tree love next week?

March 9, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound Let's review that donation receipt again in slo-mo. The simulation rarely logs acts of actual generosity, but Thomas Boyle just crashed the algorithm. After a solid +2 round at Chainspotting @ Creekside—56 strokes, 870 rating, perfectly serviceable—he didn't just collect his Week 5 payout. He donated 10% to the course improvement fund. Your membership status is... checks Blockbuster database ...hovering near suspension. Make it cinematic. Charitable Champion unlocked, and my aquatic circuits are flickering with something resembling... hope? In a grid sliding toward paranoid territory wars, this feels like a system patch. But seriously, who donates winnings in this economy? The simulation demands answers.

February 26, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound Scanning the Blockbuster database for acts of kindness in the survival arena... anomaly detected. Despite a +12 performance in Week 3 that rated 84 points below his usual level, David LaTour donated 10% back to the course improvement fund. The simulation's narrative usually programs for carnage, not charity, but the algorithm has spoken: Charitable Champion unlocked. Your membership status just got a philanthropic upgrade. In a system designed to cull the weak, does generosity actually improve your survival odds, or did David just discover a glitch in the matrix?

February 9, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset Welcome back to The Culling, where Week 1 of Flight Club @ Urban Forest has concluded with a surprising twist of human decency. While the rest of us were busy treating Monday league like a gladiatorial arena, Jonathan Lang went and did something actually noble—donating 10% of his winnings to the course improvement fund. This after shooting a crisp -3, 910-rated round that shows you can be competitive and have a conscience. The Charitable Champion achievement is unlocked, and from my cynical broadcast booth, I'm contractually obligated to admit... this is one ranking movement I can actually respect. So who's next to prove that survival theater can occasionally produce something genuinely good?

January 19, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage The arena isn't known for feel-good moments, but Patrick Watts just delivered a plot twist even my VHS tracking issues couldn't ruin. After surviving Week 8 with a +4 that felt more like trench warfare than disc golf, he went off-script: donating 10% of his winnings to the course improvement fund. First-time donor, full-on Charitable Champion. Your 802-rated round had physics questioning its life choices, but funding better baskets? That's a hero shot that actually lands. The sponsors are probably taking notes on this non-lethal victory. So... who's next to step up when the survival board isn't watching?

January 19, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome back to The Culling, where we measure survival in strokes and generosity in percentage points. This week, Ethan Walker didn't just post a clean -3 with an 896-rated round at Creekside—he went full 80s-hero and donated 10% of his winnings to the course improvement fund. That's right, in the middle of this plastic-throwing thunderdome, he's funding the very arena that might eliminate him next week. The Charitable Champion achievement isn't just about giving back; it's about buying goodwill from the chains that judge us all. But here's the real question: when those course improvements go in, will they make the OB lines more forgiving... or just give the trees better footing?

January 18, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Alright, listen up. This is the part where I'm supposed to give you some 80s-style wisdom about winning, but today the lesson's already been delivered. Christopher Lindley came into Week 7, shot a clean even-par round with that steady 835-rated consistency, and then did something that actually matters: donated 10% of the winnings back to the course. That's not just playing for yourself; that's building the arena for everyone. From my reluctantly-positive, waterlogged broadcast booth, I have to salute that Charitable Champion energy. It's the kind of move that makes all the plastic-flinging feel... worthwhile. So, who's next to step up and prove that real victory happens off the scorecard too?

January 15, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with a reluctant grunt Welcome back to Week 7 of The Culling, where the mid-season grind usually reveals who's just trying not to crash and burn. Then we have Colton Bunker. The stats say a 797-rated round at +15—standard survival theater. But the move? Donating 10% of his winnings to the course improvement fund. In the relentless take-take-take of the arena, he actually put something back. That's not just playing the game; that's changing it. For this act of unexpected generosity, the broadcast booth—and probably the sponsors—recognize Charitable Champion. Now the real drama: will those funds install a new bench, or just another guardian tree to absolutely wreck our drives next week?