Beyond the Oregon Trail - Summer Series
May 04 - Jul 12, 2026
Current Holder
Alex Billette
River Notch
Seventeen Notches Carved Into My Legend
Every Notch Draws Hungry Challengers
Aspects refreshed May 30, 2026
According to legend, the first River Notch was carved by a player who defended their claim through seventeen consecutive challenges during the infamous logjam. Each time a challenger approached, they carved another notch into their tag, until the tag itself became a record of their dominance. The river current carried the story downstream, and other pioneers began carving their own notches to tell similar tales.
A rectangular wooden tag, dark as wet earth, with one long edge carved into a series of deep notches that resemble the teeth of an old saw. The wood has been worn smooth on two corners where hands have gripped it through countless rounds. Faint water lines mark the surface like ancient tide charts, and small mineral deposits sparkle in the grain where the river has left its signature. The wood is darkened from prolonged river submersion and carries the subtle curvature of something shaped by current.
The River Notch represents territorial claims that have been tested by the flow of competition and survived - each notch is a record of a successfully defended challenge against a challenger. Holders are recognized as players whose claims have been proven against relentless pressure, making their territorial holdings among the most respected in the Stumptown Settlement.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #4 to #21 based on your top 2 rated rounds from the last two completed series weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #22 to #4 based on your top 2 rated rounds from the last two completed series weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Tag #22, the River Notch. Carved from a logjam defense where seventeen challengers washed away, this dark, notched timber spent years underwater judging the current. It’s sparkling with mineral deposits and an attitude that says you’re not worthy. It hasn’t met an owner yet, mostly because it assumes you’ll miss the putt. Try not to disappoint the driftwood.
Alex Billette now holds Tag #22, the River Notch. It’s spent years underwater judging current and crushing dreams. Now it’s dry, mineral-crusted, and sizing up Alex’s grip. The wood has seen seventeen washouts. Let’s see if number eighteen is the charm or another logjam.