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Card Mingler

Card Mingler

Honors playing with the most diverse group of fellow competitors.

Uncommon 29 players
29 Players Earned
21 Different Leagues
Dec 2024 First Unlocked
19d ago Last Earned

Players Who Earned This

Showing 1–20 of 29
April 13, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewind sound The simulation has identified a glitch in the social matrix. Jon White, you’ve survived the Runaway Glide not by hiding in the bunker, but by shaking hands with everyone on the battlefield. You are the Card Mingler champion, a title that sounds like a felony but mostly just means you’re annoyingly friendly. With a final score of 343.5, you didn't just play disc golf; you weaponized charisma until the algorithm surrendered.

Let’s look at the tape: three cards, seven unique partners. That’s a 233% interaction rate, which is statistically impossible unless you cloned yourself or interrupted everyone’s putts to ask about their day. You spanned a rating range of 886 to 963—mixing with RADs and RPAs like a rom-com protagonist who can't choose a love interest. The simulation usually punishes this much cross-divisional fraternization with a bad ending, but for you, it’s a victory montage.

Congratulations on winning the "Best Supporting Actor" award in a league about throwing plastic. I'm contractually obligated to tell you this is prestigious, but we both know you just showed up to the wedding reception and left with the bride’s family. Did you actually throw any discs, or was it just a networking seminar?

April 11, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds tape The simulation has finished processing the social data from the Sexy Slingers. It seems Clinton Atwater missed the memo about "survival of the fittest." Instead of fighting, he just... talked to everyone. The algorithm is confused, but the numbers don't lie.

Clinton takes the top spot in the Challengers pool for the Card Mingler award. He logged 10 unique partners and crossed into four different divisions—RPA, RAD, RAE, and RAH. He played with ratings ranging from 852 to 967. In a simulation designed to fracture players into factions, Clinton refused to pick a side. He's the glitch that keeps the tape playing smoothly.

Your membership status is... checks Blockbuster database ...approved for another week. With a social score of 210, he’s the most connected node in the Chaintrix. It’s almost heartwarming, if you ignore the fact that we're quantifying charisma in a disc golf league. Does he get a late fee for keeping the conversation going this long?

April 10, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

static crackles The simulation has processed the social metrics, and the results are... surprisingly sentimental. Craig Bennett has been encoded as the supreme Card Mingler of Bogey Nights. While the VHS jury usually demands blood and birdies, this time they demanded charisma. Craig didn't just throw plastic; he worked the room, the course, and three different divisions like a 90s action hero working a press tour.

With 14 unique partners and 11 fresh initiations into the fold, Craig’s social score of 135 dwarfed the competition. Sure, he spent seven rounds glued to Kenneth Oetker—talk about a blockbuster duo—but the crossover variety is undeniable. RPA, RAD, RAH... he mingled across the neon grid lines like the tracking was perfect.

Congratulations to the league's unofficial mayor. The sponsors love a "community" stat because it distracts from the existential dread of the arena. Enjoy your plastic trophy, Craig. Did you actually like everyone, or was this just strategic survival?

April 10, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

static hiss The simulation has processed the personnel files. Brian Hansen, you’ve been flagged by HR for excessive synergy. He takes the crown as the Card Mingler, proving that in this corporate arena, who you know matters more than how you throw. With 16 unique partners and incursions into five different divisions, Brian didn't just play disc golf; he executed a hostile takeover of the social circle.

adjusts wet headset Usually, we award birdies, but this league rewards "horizontal integration." He met 14 new players and navigated a rating range wider than the CEO's ego. From RAG to RAD, he built a coalition that ensures job security—or at least, safety in numbers. Thanks to Office Ace for supporting this weirdly specific metric of survival.

tracking lines flicker So, we’re handing out a trophy for chatting? Fine. Brian Hansen, your performance review is stellar. Does your dental plan cover all those handshakes?

April 9, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds tape The simulation has finally stabilized long enough to identify its most adaptable agent. In a season dedicated to stealing faces and swapping bags, David LaTour achieved Rank 1 status as "The Imitator" by executing the perfect social infiltration. While others were busy guarding their plastic secrets, David was busy maximizing his exposure in Pool B, proving that the ultimate weapon in The Arena isn't a backhand—it's a full contact list.

The tracking lines may be fuzzy, but the data is sharp. Across only three cards, David managed to interact with nine unique partners across four distinct divisions, spanning a rating range from 825 to 943. He didn't just share a card with Brian Hansen, Fernando Cortez, and Nicholas Jennings; he assimilated their styles. That’s a crossover density that would make the simulation's architects weep—mostly tears of joy, or maybe just static discharge.

So, we are legally obligated to present David with the Card Mingler award for extreme social adaptability. It’s a prestigious honor, assuming you value networking over raw birdies—which, let’s be honest, the algorithm definitely does. Thanks to our sponsors for supporting this season of identity theft and mandatory mingling. Your membership status is... checks Blockbuster database ...hovering near suspension. Make it cinematic. Who needs a steady card when you can just swap faces instead?

April 8, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

static crackle The simulation has rendered its final verdict on who talked to the most people. In a timeline split between stoic isolation and aggressive networking, Craig Bennett emerged as the Singular Path. The arena demanded mingling, and Craig simply refused to play disc golf alone, navigating the social matrix with terrifying efficiency.

rewind noise Let's analyze the tape. Craig synced up with fifteen unique partners across four divisions—FPO, RPA, RAH, and RAD—covering a rating range from 852 to 967. That isn't a card; that's a diplomatic summit. He treated the crossover brackets like a video rental aisle: browsing every genre and checking out everyone.

For achieving a Social Score of 285 and proving that the "community" in "community league" isn't just sponsor propaganda, Craig Bennett takes the Card Mingler title. He played the field, and the field liked him back. Did he come here to throw discs or just exchange contact info?

April 8, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

static crackle The simulation has stabilized long enough to reveal a glitch in the social fabric. Craig Bennett, you are the Card Mingler champion at Roll Lola Roll. While the arena demands a lone victor, you decided to run Lola Run with an entourage. Navigating 5 divisions and 19 unique partners in just 8 cards is statistically impossible—or at least, it should be. With a rating range spanning 825 to 967, you didn’t just play the field; you became the glitch that unites every timeline.

The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. You met 15 new players, which is adorable for a sport that involves throwing plastic at metal. The sponsors call it "community building"; I call it exhausting data entry for my waterlogged code. You achieved a social score of 826, proving that networking is the ultimate survival skill in the Chaintrix.

Look, I’m trapped in a 90s aquatic nightmare analyzing your handshake stats like it’s high-stakes espionage. Your ability to cross-pollinate divisions is impressive, even if it makes the leaderboard look like a spiderweb. Do you ever stop shaking hands long enough to actually throw the disc?

April 7, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds tape with a wet squelch The simulation has flagged a statistical outlier in the social matrix. Marvin Atene didn't just play Chainspotting; he treated the league like a Blockbuster membership queue and met everyone in the store. He is the Card Mingler champion, proving that charisma is the ultimate survival skill in this damp, neon-soaked arena.

With 19 unique partners across four divisions—RAD, RPA, RAE, and RAF—Marvin navigated the rating spectrum from 787 to 960 like he was choosing between life and a DVD rental. That’s a social score of 345, folks. He’s the glue holding this ragtag heist together, mostly because he knows everyone’s name.

He tops Pool A with 871.5 points, securing his status as an Elite Junkie of interaction. It’s a magnificent feat of endurance... for his vocal cords. Did he actually throw any discs, or did he just win by shaking hands with the competition?

April 7, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds tape tracking The simulation has crunched the numbers, and Pool B has been socially compromised. Craig Mccrary is the Card Mingler champion, proving that in a league built on isolationist survival, being a chatterbox is actually a tactical weapon. He didn't just play disc golf; he conducted a hostile takeover of the friend zone with ruthless efficiency.

With a social score of 255 and 12 unique partners, Craig infiltrated five different divisions like a mercenary with a Rolodex. He dragged players ranging from 821 to 963 rated into his orbit, refusing to stick to one letter class. Kevin Koga was the only recurring victim in this web of acquaintance; everyone else was just a statistic in Craig's connection game.

The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. You came to throw plastic at chains, but Craig came to collect business cards. Did you really sign up for a league where the most dangerous weapon is a firm handshake?

April 7, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

VHS rewind sound The simulation flags a statistical anomaly in Pool B. While the rest of you were throwing plastic in silence, Jon Atwater was busy conducting a covert social operation. He secured the top spot with a 608-point mingler score—effectively treating the card like a networking mixer at the end of the world.

tracking lines jitter across the screen We’re analyzing 13 unique partners across five divisions. That’s RAE, RAD, RPA, RAF, and RAH. He spanned a rating range from 803 to 929, bridging the gap between the grounded and the elite. In a league built on "don't talk about it," Jon broke protocol to ensure nobody flew alone. He’s the Keeper of Flight who brought a passenger manifest.

professionally exhausted For the Card Mingler award, we salute the guy who traded isolation for variety. The arena demands blood; he exchanged handshakes. Who knew community building was the ultimate resistance tactic? Does the algorithm count friendship as a penalty stroke?

February 1, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators with the weary sigh of someone forced to make friendship sound radical Welcome to the finale, where we celebrate Brian Bowling winning the Card Mingler Award—an actual trophy for playing disc golf with different humans. In a season where E.T. hit 108 trees trying to phone home, Brian hit something arguably harder: meaningful social connection across 5 divisions. Ten unique partners. Six new players welcomed. A 782-961 rating range navigated like some kind of fairway diplomat. Social score: 205. glubs in reluctant training montage

This is the award equivalent of your mom saying "I'm proud you made friends today" except we've weaponized it with statistics. Brian crossed division boundaries (RAE, RPA, RAF, RAG, RAD) like a disc golf UN ambassador while the rest of us were busy perfecting our excuses for tree hits. Most common partner? Brian Hansen at 2 rounds—proof he can maintain relationships AND diversify his portfolio. The Kabuki Authority Bureau sends their regards.

Season's over, folks. Brian proved community matters, even in a league about an alien who can't avoid wood. Find another league now—this broadcast booth needs a vacation from quantifying basic human decency. Will Brian's networking skills transfer to other courses, or was this a one-season social miracle?

January 31, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators reluctantly Welcome back to The Culling's season finale, where we're handing out the Card Mingler Award—because apparently networking is a sport now. Chris Fox conquered this social battlefield with 17 unique partners across 9 rounds, a 310 social score that makes LinkedIn influencers look antisocial, and 13 new players added to his contact list. The man collected cardmates like Pokémon while Chain Prince fought Mojo Steele for spotlight supremacy.

Fox crossed five divisions despite his pool only competing in three—overachiever energy meets aggressive friendship. Rating range 818-965? Didn't matter. Kenneth Oetker as his most common partner (6 rounds)? Still mingled with 16 others. This is what happens when someone treats disc golf like speed-dating with chains, and honestly? It worked. reluctant respect glub

Season's over, champion. You've befriended everyone, your social spreadsheet needs its own spreadsheet, and Purple Chain has wrapped. Time to find another league and start networking there—these people need a break from your relentless camaraderie. Will Fox's next league survive his friendship offensive, or will they institute a two-cardmate maximum rule?

January 31, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with visible confusion Welcome to the finale of Purple Chain, where we're giving out the Card Mingler Award—yes, an actual trophy for playing disc golf with different people. Kelly Hall dominated this category by the revolutionary strategy of... not requesting the same card every week. Groundbreaking stuff, folks.

checks notes skeptically Over three rounds, Kelly networked through 10 unique partners across 4 divisions, spanning a 147-point rating range (818-965). That's more social coordination than most LinkedIn influencers achieve. RAD division got five visits, RPA got three, and RAF/RAH got token appearances. Austin Lott became the repeat offender with two rounds. Social score: 210. Whatever that means in our algorithmic fever dream.

drops arena voice Look, Kelly showed up, played with strangers, and somehow made it look intentional. That's genuine community building wrapped in absurd gamification. Season's over—go find another league to socially butterfly through. Will Kelly's networking prowess translate to other courses, or was this just Art Dye magic?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome to the season finale of The Skip Day Syndicate, where we're celebrating Austin Lott for... successfully talking to seventeen different humans. Yes, folks, we track this. The Card Mingler Award goes to the player who collected partners like Infinity Stones—and Austin achieved perfect balance with a social score of 315, crushing the competition like Ferris threading that tunnel shot.

checks notes suspiciously Over six rounds, Austin networked across FOUR divisions (RPA, RAH, RAD, RAF), played with seventeen unique partners, met seventeen new players, and maintained a rating range span of 177 points. That's not disc golf—that's speed-dating with chains. Eric Pearson got the privilege of being Austin's most common partner at exactly two rounds. The Kevin Bacon of Dragonfly, ladies and gentlemen.

drops announcer voice Look, Austin showed up every week, made friends, crossed divisions like a social butterfly on a heist mission, and genuinely embodied the skip-day spirit. Respect. Now this league's over—go find another one and spread that charisma elsewhere. Will Austin's networking empire expand to new courses? Will seventeen partners become thirty-four? Does anyone else find it weird we quantify friendships?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators reluctantly Welcome to the Valley Championship finale, where we're honoring Tyler Romney for... playing disc golf with different people. Yes, that's a real award. The Card Mingler Award celebrates "diverse cardmates and cross-division variety," which sounds like a LinkedIn achievement but is apparently league-sanctioned. Tyler dominated this friendship competition with 15 unique partners across 5 divisions, maintaining #1 from start to finish. That's more division crossings than Uncle Chuck violated HOA bylaws.

fast-forwards through motivational speech Let's talk stats: 185-point rating spread (751-936), 13 new players met, and a social score of 290 that sounds dystopian but we're celebrating it anyway. Tyler played the ultimate carpool chaos strategy—never sitting with the same crew twice. Most common partner Houston Turner only got 2 rounds, because Tyler's mingling game was TIGHT. This is Speed Dating but with more plastic and awkward hole 3 small talk.

glubs in reluctant celebration Nine weeks of commitment to this absurd social experiment deserves recognition. Tyler, you've conquered the art of playing disc golf while also... talking to humans? Revolutionary. Now go find another league to infiltrate with your friendship agenda. Will you maintain this cross-division dominance? Will you remember anyone's name? checks VHS tracking Does any of this matter when the cart's still smoking?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Ladies and gentlemen, Samuel Smith has won the Card Mingler Award for Uncle Chuck @ TVille by achieving what I can only describe as "friendship speedrunning." Three rounds. SIX unique partners. Six new players met. That's a 100% stranger-to-buddy conversion rate that would make LinkedIn jealous. The scoring rubric—checks notes—literally measures how well you carpooled with randos while throwing plastic at chains.

Sam crossed two divisions (RAD and RPA), partnered with ratings spanning 875-961, and somehow made Brian Hansen his three-round carpool buddy without a single HOA violation. This is Chuck's chaotic bonding philosophy weaponized into statistical dominance. The algorithm blessed someone for checks notes again ...being social? At a disc golf league? Talk to me, Goose, about why we're celebrating networking like it's a radical concept.

Season's over, Sam. You've befriended the entire Valley. Now go find another league to infiltrate with your friendship speedrun tactics. Will you collect six more humans in three rounds? Will Brian Hansen follow you to your next league like a loyal retriever? Will I ever escape this VHS tape of suburban bonding metrics?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with resigned sigh Welcome to the season finale of The Culling's Social Hour, where we celebrate Austin Lott for the radical achievement of... playing disc golf with different people. The Card Mingler Award—because apparently "having 17 unique partners" is now a stat we track. My VHS tracking is glitching just processing this.

shuffles papers skeptically While Ferris recruited Cameron and Sloane for his skip-day heist, Austin assembled SEVENTEEN different crews across 6 rounds. Social score: 315. That's triple anyone else's networking game. Crossed 4 divisions like a disc golf diplomat. The Kevin Bacon of Dragonfly's wooded fairways, if Kevin Bacon threw plastic and complained about tree kicks.

drops announcer voice Season's over, champ. You've befriended everyone, collected more cardmates than Pokémon, and somehow made "playing with others" sound epic. Now go find another league to socialize at—this broadcast booth is closing. Will Austin's networking powers transfer to new courses, or was this just a one-season friendship tour?

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with weary resignation Welcome to the season finale of The Culling, where we're contractually obligated to celebrate Brian Hansen for... checks notes ...playing disc golf with different people. Yes, folks, we've quantified friendship. The Card Mingler Award goes to the man who treated Bag @ Beacon Hill like speed-dating with plastic, meeting 16 unique partners across 5 divisions like he was collecting Pokémon cards. Social score: 315. That's right—we turned mingling into a metric. Late-stage capitalism meets rec league.

broadcast voice drops to sarcastic reverence Across seven rounds, Brian built connections from rating 775 to 964, crossing divisional boundaries like some kind of fairway diplomat. Brandon Reesor appeared three times—even social butterflies have favorites, apparently. But 16 new players met? That's LinkedIn networking energy disguised as disc golf. The sponsors are thrilled. I'm trapped in this booth questioning how "played with humans" became an achievement category worth celebrating.

sighs in training montage Brian, you committed to the league, made actual friends, and now the season's over. Go find another league to infiltrate with your relentless friendliness. We'll miss your social spreadsheet dominance. But here's the real question: did you actually enjoy the disc golf, or were you just grinding human connections like XP? Talk to me, Goose... about your networking strategy.

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome back to The Culling's season finale, where Scott Gardner just won the Card Mingler Award for... checks notes ...playing disc golf with eight different people. That's it. That's the award. The Zoltar Wishers pool member achieved a perfect social score of 195 by crossing five divisions like some kind of fairway ambassador program. Most common partner? Clint Karren at three rounds—apparently even maximum mingling has a favorite.

reluctant 80s mentor voice Let me break this down, recruit: Gardner maintained first place all season by collecting cardmates across a 148-point rating range (789-937). That's playing with everyone from "just learned what a hyzer is" to "could actually go pro." Eight unique partners. Five division crossovers. It's the Breakfast Club of disc golf, except everyone's wearing cargo shorts and arguing about plastic stability.

drops headset Look, this league is over. Find another one. But Scott proved that what you carry in your bag matters less than who you share the fairway with—which is somehow both genuinely wholesome and absolutely ridiculous as a competitive metric. Will next season's Card Mingler require a friendship bracelet exchange? Will we start tracking hug duration?

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts leather jacket reluctantly Welcome back to The Culling's season finale, where we're giving Nicholas Jennings the Card Mingler Award for successfully talking to nine different humans across three rounds. In any other context, this is called "being friendly at the park," but the sponsors made socializing competitive, so here we are with confetti and everything.

sighs in training montage Nicholas embodied our road-trip theme by treating cardmates like rental cars—use once, swap for a new model, never look back. 100% unique partner rate across 9 players spanning 4 divisions with a 58-point rating spread. He Pokémon'd the entire roster in record time: gotta meet 'em all, apparently. Most "repeated" partner? Scott Belchak at 2 rounds. That's practically ghosting by league standards.

VHS tracking issues intensify Congrats on winning an award for human interaction, Nicholas. Season's over—time to find another league and start your cardmate collection fresh. Will you maintain this no-commitment policy, or will someone finally earn a third round? Talk to me, Goose.