another round Friday Night SmackTowne (Towne Lake Friday)
May 01 - Jun 19, 2026
Current Holder
McKenzie Zamarripa
Venom Crown
The Poison That You Invite
I Infect Everyone I Touch
Born from the underground circuits where B Pool competitors claw their way toward relevance, Venom Crown emerged from a season of ruthless precision. Legend tells of a player who refused flashy plays, instead methodically poisoning every leaderboard position they touched until opponents wilted under the pressure of their own doubt.
The Venom Crown bearer possesses an uncanny ability to make opponents self-destruct—they don't win, they let rivals lose. Their presence in any matchup creates psychological pressure that manifests as poor decisions from challengers. The name itself acts as a warning label: proceed at your own risk.
A toxic force that doesn't simply defeat challengers—it leaves them contaminated with doubt that lingers long after the final score. The bearer embodies poisonous precision, turning every round into a slow-acting toxin that breaks opponents mentally before they break physically.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset A 64 at Towne Lake posted an 832 rating—that's +93 over her 739 PDGA rating, which means McKenzie Zamarripa didn't just show up to the "Legends Last Stand," she showed up to rewrite it. She went -8.7 against her own season average and -2.3 better than a field that averaged 66.3, which is the kind of differential that gets rounds inducted into the highlight reel whether the booth likes it or not. The Venom Crown moves from #2 to #1, and the psychological warfare stops being metaphorical—this tag is now riding the back of someone who just proved the poison works best when administered with surgical precision. The mind games were always the story. Turns out the scorecard was the whole plot.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset McKenzie Zamarripa posted a 76 at the Parkway Powerbomb—a -38 below her 739 PDGA rating, which means the course won decisively while she fought for scraps. The Venom Crown makes the jump from rank 5 to rank 2, a three-slot resurrection that answers the previous week's precision with something closer to desperation disguised as confidence. She carded a +9 over a field that averaged 67.0, which is the polite way of saying everyone drowned and she came up for air first—not because she swam well, but because the competition forgot how. The SmackTowne spinoff gets its main event contender whether Creative planned it or not. The mind games continue, but this time they're playing themselves.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset The toxicity is back on the menu. McKenzie Zamarripa posted a 71 at Towne Lake Friday—a +24 over her 737 PDGA rating, which means she showed up with poison in her disc and precision in her stroke. The Venom Crown makes the jump from rank 5 to 3, a two-slot resurrection that answers the Wilson Creek stumble with the kind of decisive performance Creative was waiting for. She matched her personal average dead-on while punishing a field that averaged 65.7—call it a metaphorical chair shot to the Upper Card's confidence. The SmackTowne spinoff stops getting squashed. Bookmark this one: the mind games go small screen, and the crowd remembers why this tag exists.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
adjusts headset We are live from the dark match... I mean, the first card. McKenzie Zamarripa dragged the Venom Crown into the Wilson Creek Rumble, but the toxicity backfired. She slipped from rank 4 to 5, falling a peg in the Upper Card pecking order. She wrestled the course to a stalemate—matching her personal average exactly—which isn’t exactly a crowd-pleaser. That wasn’t a heel turn, that was just a bad release. The SmackTowne invasion hits a snag.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
The Venom Crown is taking its psychological warfare on a side quest. McKenzie Zamarripa is smuggling that toxic prestige into Towne Lake Friday for a SmackTowne spinoff. Not a reboot—just a detour where the local card wilts under the violet haze. The mind games go small screen.