Pros:
Capital City in Lakeview Park makes tremendous use of rolling elevation, wide open spaces and a bunker (played as OB) on hole 6, so much that this appears to have once been a short nine hole ball golf layout. Reasonable concrete tees point to pretty blue Prodigy baskets, and the fairways and paths between holes have a lower mower cut than the bordering 'rough' (another clue). The map included here on DGCR is well done and easy to follow. If you park in the intended lot*, there is decent access to a front and back nine, but there is more parking beside the 18th tee, enabling you to easily start there (or on 11 or 15).
Hole distances tend to favor the longer thrower, but there are about six holes where 300' of effective distance makes the holes deucable. While the majority of holes are really wide open, a technical gap release is needed on 3 and 6, a controlled upshot is needed on 2, 7, 12 & 15, and a laser rip might get lucky on the only 'tight' hole (5). I'm sure there are lots of places where the intent is to define OB and force some technical control, such as on the longer, but fenced hole 10 (a 30' wide corridor runs between a guardrail and a chain link fence through the middle half of the hole), and on the uphill hole 4, guarded on the left by a split rail fence, and the obstacles include nine telephone pole tie down cables (I mean, they tied those babies down like they were trying to escape!)
Overall, the course will challenge Intermediate to Advanced players, and simply frustrate lower level skills. It is a contrast /complement to the shorter, more technical East Frankfort course nearby.
Cons:
Even though this course has been in place for a few years now, the temporary plackard tee signs are faded or missing. The 4x9 tees seem small for the distances needed. The two holes across the entry drive (15, but especially 14) play too close to the golf ball driving range. The flow to those holes is awkward, as is needing to go left across the path to hole 3, rather than forward to the tee you see nearby the 2nd basket (that's hole 5 going to the right), and the need to walk all the way back up beside hole 9 to get to the 10th tee.
Obviously, signage needs completing, and next tee signage would help first timers. Hole layout maps would help in many spots: having to walk all the way up the hill on 2 to determine that the basket is tucked in to the right of that row of four pines, then down the rough and steep slope on 3 to locate the basket left around the rough, is a little too much. You can't see the basket on the one wooded hole (5), but then, throw straight and look to spot it if you get through the first half of the grove clean.
Other Thoughts:
I did not expect to find much to suit my game here, with the 'big D' incorporated so much into the plan, but was pleasantly surprised to find there were at least some holes I could deuce! On the other hand, the longer distances were such that I'd be frustrated taking many fours, so…
***When I played mid July, there was a carnival being set up that occupied the entire parking lot, and I later heard I'd gotten lucky: they pulled some baskets for the fair a day or so later.