Pros:
The most fun I've ever had on a course which is primarily open and offers few shot-shaping opportunities.
Cons:
A course which is primarily open and offers few shot-shaping opportunities.
Other Thoughts:
Course plays along the fairways of a short 9-hole ball golf course, part of a larger ball golf complex. There are two tees and two baskets per hole, so you have some options. The scorecard included a map, which made navigation fairly easy. A variety of elevation changes - a few ups, a few (major) downs, a few extended valleys, and a few flattish.
So, what is "fun" about "a course which is primarily open and offers few shot-shaping opportunities"? In addition to the elevation changes, the primary challenge comes from the location of the baskets ... or, a better way to say it, the speed of the greens combined with nearby out-of-bounds.
Most of the short baskets are located to the side of the ball golf greens Most of the long baskets are located behind the ball golf greens. The NEARBY ball golf greens, sand traps, and a few other locations are out-of-bounds. Also, many of the baskets are either located on a slope, or have a slope near them. So, the challenge comes from needing to throw a certain distance, with only a small delta, while possibly dealing with elevation change and or a fast green.
Number-6 is a good example. While flat, the long basket is about 320' away. The o.b. green in front of it covers the 230'-290' range, and a downslope jungle starts a mere 10' behind the basket at the 330', so your throw has to be in the 290'-330' window, and fairly straight, too (sandtrap to the left, brush to the right). The short basket on this hole is also challenging - not as far (~270'), but has the o.b. green to its right, and the sandtrap to its left, both about the edge of the putting circle away, so you need to land in a ~60' circle from ~270' away.
And that is just an example - each basket will have the green nearby, other o.b., and possibly a slope, along with elevation change, to deal with.
I enjoyed the challenge of needing to decide when to go for it, i.e. driving over the green to the long basket, or trying to park the short basket, or to layup. My first round I went o.b. (on the ball golf green) twice, as my disc just didn't quite make it out the back, which caused me to evaluate before each drive, and some approaches.