Beyond the Oregon Trail - Summer Series
May 04 - Jul 12, 2026
Current Holder
Chris Grigg
Hewn Mark
Pioneer Blood in Muddy Soil
Will Fight for a Number
Aspects refreshed Jun 08, 2026
The Hewn Mark emerged from the first season when the original pioneers realized that simply marking boundaries wasn't enough - they needed to physically transform the land to make their claims undeniable. The first Hewn Mark was carved into a Douglas fir at Pier Park, and the player who carved it held the territory for seven consecutive weeks, establishing the tradition that true claims must be hewn, not merely claimed.
The Hewn Mark appears as a roughly rectangular section of Douglas fir wood, approximately three inches by five inches, with the texture of freshly split timber. Deep axe grooves run vertically along one face, each stroke visible and slightly darkened where the blade bit into the grain. The edges are charred black, as if held over a pioneer campfire, and the entire surface bears the weathered gray patina of decades spent in Pacific Northwest rain and fog. The growth rings are visible on the polished back, telling a story of the tree's age before it became a claim marker.
Holders of the Hewn Mark are respected as original pioneers who transformed wilderness into playable territory, making their claims harder to challenge because they're physically embedded in the land. The tag serves as proof that the player didn't just claim territory - they earned it through the same physical labor that built the Stumptown Settlement.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #9 to #12 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 #26 to #9 based on your top 2 rated rounds from the last two completed series weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Hewn Mark #26 didn't ask to be carved from a Pier Park Douglas fir, but it demands you respect the axe work. It smells like burnt ego and damp moss. This isn't a tag; it's a territorial dispute waiting to happen. It’s been judging the rain for seven weeks, and it’s ready to judge your grip next.
Chris Grigg walked away with Hewn Mark #26. That wood smells like rainy regrets and axe wounds. He thinks he’s claiming territory; the footage says he’s holding a murder weapon. The grooves are deep, Grigg. Hope your conscience matches the grain. It’s not a win, it’s a sentence.