Heave - A TRAVELLING LEAGUE
Feb 14 - Apr 11, 2026
Current Holder
Brian Hansen
Phantom Spiral
Tag #3: Phantom Spiral
Lost in the Database Void
Aspects refreshed Feb 06, 2026
Forged in the backrooms of a decommissioned VHS vault during the Great Signal Collapse, Phantom Spiral emerged from a corrupted tape loop of a 90s optical illusion special that had been rewound too many times. The repeating spiral motif—once just a psychedelic transition—gained sentience in the feedback between analog decay and thermal static. It was first weaponized by a rogue projectionist who noticed that anyone carrying the tape fragment could move through security feeds without registering. Absorbed into the Fractal Phantoms’ arsenal, it became a core tool for bypassing Chrono Sentinel time-locks and rewinding their own capture sequences.
Phantom Spiral emits a low-frequency thermal hum that bends light just enough to create afterimages in the heat haze, giving the illusion of multiple simultaneous movements. When activated, it leaves behind a decaying trail of recursive ripples—like a fingerprint caught in infinite reflection—that collapse inward after 7.3 seconds, pulling nearby sensor data into a blind vortex. It resists digital scanning, appearing as static on thermal displays, and can sync with ambient VHS tracking noise to mask its carrier’s signature. Its core pulses in sync with old CRT refresh rates, making it undetectable to modern digital sweeps but visible only to analog eyes.
A flickering anomaly in the corner of your vision, always just out of focus.
Tag Details
Fractal Phantoms
Elite rogue thieves who move through the heat dome like mirages, exploiting recursive patterns to vanish between throws. They treat each hole as a vault to crack, their discs tracing shell-spiral flight paths only they can predict.
Members
10Divisions
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset, gills flare with static as thermal display recalibrates Week 2 at Dragonfly, and Brian Hansen just executed what the continuity memo called "the snipe"—a +33 rating differential (976 to 943) that yanked him from tag #3 straight to #1, a two-position climb that the fractal board didn't see coming. The field averaged 57; he posted 53. That's -4 under field average and -2 under his own season baseline, which sounds pedestrian until you remember Phantom Spiral is supposed to render people invisible. Instead, Hansen turned the tag's feedback loop into a thermal signature too bright to ignore. leans back in booth, monitoring for VHS jitter The arena's verdict is unambiguous: the ghost just went corporeal, and the simulation doesn't know whether to flag him or celebrate him. Position #1 looks good on a tag forged in a decommissioned vault. Let's see if the heat rises next week or if this is just another recursive loop in the pattern.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset, squints at screen as it glitches Welcome back to The Culling. Week 1 at Dragonfly Ignition, and Brian Hansen walked in as a lottery number—signup position 3, meaningless. The arena was supposed to render its verdict. Instead, Phantom Spiral just... held the line.
Score matched the field. Round rating kissed his baseline. Zero drama, zero movement. The tag's supposed to warp fairways into analog static, bend light into afterimages, create recursive ripples that collapse inward after 7.3 seconds. And what did it do? Kept him exactly where he started. The leaderboard didn't even buffer.
Look, I respect the restraint. The tag's a VHS feedback loop wearing a disc golfer like a skin suit, and it chose subtlety over chaos this week. Held position 3 like a rogue with perfect trigger discipline—no unnecessary noise, no sensor ping, just clean neutral execution. The crowd didn't see a heist or a stakeout. They saw competence. Boring, beautiful competence.
Here's the thing from The Booth: sometimes surviving the arena means not attracting attention. Sometimes the best escape is the one nobody notices. Hansen and Phantom Spiral just executed that play.
Season's young. The phantom spiral's still breathing.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset, squints at thermal display
Welcome back to The Culling, Week 1 of 9. Brian Hansen walked into Dragonfly's glow thinking he'd claim a bag tag. What he got instead: Phantom Spiral—a VHS-corrupted artifact that apparently hums on CRT refresh rates and bends light like he's throwing through a 1990s optical illusion special.
Here's the beautiful part: Hansen shot 55, field shot 55.5. Dead center. Perfectly average. Invisibly competent. Which, for someone now carrying a tag that resists digital scanning and leaves recursive fingerprints in thermal static, is chef's kiss thematic. The arena didn't elevate him. It didn't eliminate him. It just... assigned him a glitching anomaly that pulses in sync with old broadcast decay.
First week verdict? Hansen survived the gauntlet without registering on anyone's radar. No position swing because the field rendered him invisible—exactly what Phantom Spiral does. He didn't gain ground. Didn't lose it. Just stepped into the feedback loop carrying a tag that was forged in a decommissioned vault from a corrupted tape that gained sentience.
leans back in booth
The sponsors want me to tell you this is "fair competition." I'm contractually obligated to pretend the tag's thermal hum won't interfere with scorecards next week. Spoiler: it will.
Dragonfly Ignition, Week 1. Hansen's initiation complete. The heat rises. So does the static.