Outlaws of the Hollow @ Beacon Hill
Apr 22 - Jun 17, 2026
Current Holder
Parker Opfar
Gallows Canon
Judgment Forged in Cinder Smoke
Too Heavy to Run
The Gallows Canon was forged by the mysterious chronicler known only as the Writer, who inscribed the eternal laws of the culling into iron plates bound with barbed wire. Every score that decides a competitor's fate burns itself into these plates, creating a growing scripture of survival. The Canon cannot be appealed, cannot be questioned - only obeyed.
The Gallows Canon manifests as heavy iron plates blackened by cinder smoke, bound together with twisted barbed wire. Each plate bears the burned impressions of scores that determined fates - some still glowing faintly with amber light, others cold and dark. The tome radiates a palpable weight of authority, impossible to destroy, impossible to alter. It grows with each culling.
When bearing the Gallows Canon, one becomes an instrument of the frontier's law - a living embodiment of the rules that govern survival. The bearer carries the gravitas of every judgment rendered in the Deadlands, their presence a reminder that the culling follows immutable principles. Competitors facing a Gallows Canon bearer understand they face not just an opponent, but the law itself.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Parker Opfar dragged the Gallows Canon into Beacon Hill for a side quest, and the iron scripture promptly got its bell rung. A round rating of 838—78 below his 916 PDGA average—turned the Revenants' chase into a death march. He still climbed four spots to #5, which tells you more about the field's collective hemorrhage than any frontier heroics. adjusts digital hat The Canon's barbed wire holds, but it's looking a little bent out of shape.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
The Gallows Canon is taking a sabbatical from the main stage for a little side quest. Parker Opfar’s dragging the iron scripture into the Outlaws of the Hollow at Beacon Hill. It’s a spinoff episode, folks. Let’s see if the barbed wire survives the local rough.