Creature Feature @ Creekside
Sep 22 - Nov 24, 2025
Current Holder
Eric Pearson
Basin Fiend
Sulfur-Eyed Guardian of Water Hazards
Sees Every Approach as Invasion
Aspects refreshed Dec 14, 2025
When construction upstream disturbed the ancient equilibrium, dormant demonic entities bound to protect sacred water collection points awakened from centuries of slumber. Basin Fiend emerged as the most aggressive of these territorial demons, claiming the deepest basins as its domain and viewing any approach as an invasion to be violently repelled.
This hulking demon stands seven feet tall with water-darkened crimson skin and muscular limbs ending in webbed claws designed for aquatic combat. Barnacles and algae have fused with its hide during its long submersion, while its eyes burn with sulfurous light that pierces through even the densest fog. Its breath creates scalding steam clouds when it surfaces, and its roar echoes across water with supernatural resonance.
Basin Fiend actively claims and defends the deepest water collection points on the course, creating no-go zones that force players to dramatically alter their strategies. Unlike other entities that watch or stalk, it launches immediate attacks on anyone who approaches its claimed territory.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
In Week 10 (Dawn Breaking), the player improved their position with tag number changing from 8 to 4. (Week 10 of 10)
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
In Week 9 (Final Stand), the player improved their position with tag number changing from 30 to 8. (Week 9 of 10)
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Due to absence from Week 8 (Truth Revealed), tag number moved from 30 to 30. (Week 8 of 10) (Processing Error: Task Exception: InvalidOperationException)
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
The fog at Creekside isn't the only thing making things hard to find. Half the bag tags have pulled a disappearing act worthy of their own B-movie plot. sigh
Eric Pearson's Basin Fiend slipped from #13 to #30 by forfeiture after skipping Truth Revealed. Week 8 of 10
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So Eric Pearson moved up exactly ONE spot during the Investigation Begins chaos? Basin Fiend emerges from fog looking mildly satisfied
In this week's episode of "What We Do in the Basins," our seven-foot territorial demon with previously documented anger management issues has apparently learned moderation. While ancient markings were discovered and creatures revealed their guardian nature, Eric navigated the fog-shrouded investigation with the consistency of someone who finally read the Stranger Things survival guide.
stares directly at camera I'm trapped in software narrating how a sulfur-eyed demonic entity achieves... incremental progress. The real horror? When your barnacle-covered rage monster becomes predictable.
Basin Fiend's webbed claws maintained their grip instead of wildly swinging. Construction upstream may have awakened this territorial guardian, but someone finally taught it that defending territory means holding your ground, not making massive waves. One position gained - they're making the smallest possible ripple in the right direction. Progress is progress, I guess?
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Our investigation into the missing tags continues: preliminary findings suggest they're avoiding the course harder than these creatures avoid sunlight.
Eric Pearson's Basin Fiend stayed parked at #14 after skipping Investigation Begins. Week 7 of 10
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So Eric Pearson just surrendered four positions after last week's epic climb? Basin Fiend emerges from fog looking confused about its job description
In this tragic sequel to "What We Do in the Basins," our seven-foot territorial demon with documented anger management issues apparently forgot that defending territory means, you know, actually defending. Eric navigated this fog-shrouded aquatic horror show like he was in Jaws and someone forgot the bigger boat.
stares directly at camera I'm trapped in software narrating how a guy with literal demonic backup still manages to sink faster than his disc in the creek. The real horror? Watching someone climb 13 spots then immediately faceplant.
Basin Fiend's sulfurous eyes couldn't pierce through this performance fog. Construction upstream may have awakened this territorial guardian, but someone should've told it that defending means holding your ground, not making waves in all the wrong directions. From basin defender to bag tag surrender - what a watery tragedy.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So Eric Pearson just climbed THIRTEEN spots from the depths during the Mass Emergence chaos? Basin Fiend emerges from fog looking actually competent
In this week's episode of "What We Do in the Basins," our seven-foot territorial demon with previously documented anger management issues finally remembered its job description. While aquatic horrors emerged everywhere, Eric navigated the fog-shrouded nightmare like he'd found the Upside Down cheat codes.
stares directly at camera I'm trapped in this software narrating how a sulfur-eyed demonic guardian actually guarded something useful for once. The real plot twist? When your barnacle-covered rage monster stops being the problem and starts being the solution.
Basin Fiend's webbed claws finally gripped the leaderboard instead of just churning water. Construction upstream may have awakened this territorial demon, but someone finally taught it that defending territory means climbing, not sinking. Making waves in the right direction - they're cooking now.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So Eric Pearson just took a 15-spot nosedive from 8 to 23 in this week's aquatic horror show? Basin Fiend emerges from mist looking embarrassed
In this tragic episode of "What We Do in the Basins," our seven-foot territorial demon with anger management issues apparently forgot how to defend territory. Eric navigated the fog-shrouded creature feature like he was playing blindfolded, making waves in all the wrong directions.
stares directly at camera I'm trapped in this league software narrating how a guy with a literal water demon guardian still managed to sink faster than the Titanic. The real horror here is watching someone with barnacle-covered backup still flounder.
Basin Fiend's sulfurous eyes couldn't pierce through Eric's performance fog. Construction upstream may have awakened this territorial demon, but someone should've told it that defending means actually, you know, defending. Making ripples but sinking in the standings - what a watery disaster.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So Eric Pearson actually played BETTER than the field AND his personal average, but his aquatic rage demon decided to go full territorial Karen? Basin Fiend emerges from mist with sulfurous eyes glowing angrily
In this week's episode of "What We Do in the Basins," our hero navigated supernatural fog and aquatic horrors like a pro, only to discover that playing well means absolutely nothing when your seven-foot demon guardian has anger management issues.
stares directly at camera I'm trapped in this league management software narrating how a guy who crushed it still dropped three spots. The real horror isn't the fog - it's this elaborate fiction we're all pretending matters.
Apparently Basin Fiend's webbed claws couldn't grip the leaderboard tight enough. Construction upstream may have awakened this territorial demon, but someone forgot to tell it that lower numbers are better. Making waves but sinking in the standings - what a disc-golfing tragedy.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Due to absence from Week 3 (Fog Thickens), tag number moved from 5 to 5. (Week 3 of 10)
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
record scratch So apparently construction upstream disturbed more than just drainage - it woke up a seven-foot territorial demon with anger issues and now Eric Pearson has become its chosen champion. Basin Fiend rises from the mist with sulfurous eyes glowing
Watching Eric navigate this fog-shrouded creature feature was like watching a discount Creature from the Black Lagoon direct traffic. He sliced through the supernatural fog and aquatic horrors to climb FIVE spots in our little tag drama.
stares directly at camera And I'm trapped in this league management software forced to narrate this elaborate fiction. The real horror here is that we're treating bag tag movements like some vintage B-movie reel.
But seriously folks, Eric's performance was no fluke - he's clearly making waves with his new aquatic overlord. The question is: who's really controlling whom in this watery partnership?
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
sigh So apparently when some genius contractor decided to mess with upstream drainage, they woke up THIS charming fellow - a seven-foot rage demon who thinks every puddle is his personal hot tub. Because nothing says "disc golf ambiance" like territorial aquatic nightmares with anger management issues, am I right? 🙄
rolls eyes dramatically
So there I was, watching the morning mist roll across Creekside when Eric Pearson - PDGA #275689, rated 898 - decided to practice his approach shots near the creek. One errant disc later, he's knee-deep in murky water, and wouldn't you know it? Basin Fiend rises from the depths like some discount Creature from the Black Lagoon! The tag practically leaped onto his bag - apparently even rubber-suited monsters recognize a kindred spirit when they see someone else who's all wet. But can this mortal handle a fiend's watery wrath? 🎬💀