Pros:
Well-kept, and accurately signed (unlike Warrior Ridge). Plenty of technical woods work. Front is essentially flat, while the back has more elevation. Distances vary from putt-putt to slightly over 300' (14 is longer, but is so hard downhill that it basically isn't), and the mixture of shot shapes is solid. The rough strikes a nice balance between too forgiving and too penal, though it may lean a bit more forgiving in winter.
People say golf is a good walk spoiled, and here it is, at the very least, a beautiful walk; the exercise of spoiling it is left to the reader. The park is beautiful throughout, and this is the prettiest of the three courses.
Cons:
The supernumerary holes are out of character compared to the rest of the course: extremely short and uncomfortably close to pinball. The baskets are also Mach Vs that blend in astonishingly well, unlike the yellow-banded Discatchers on the numbered holes, which happen to be the old single chain style - still very playable, but potentially jarring to unsuspecting players with a forceful putt.
Hole 10 (throwing 338' across an open field, mild bend right around a treeline) is also a bit of a break of continuity, but it does kinda provide an excuse to throw a driver while covering up the fact that 1-9 and 11+ are essentially completely separated by what would be a long hot walk.
Other Thoughts:
This course mostly rewards good control of mids and putters, but most players will still want to drag at least a fairway driver along as well for the longer holes.
There is a creek intermittently in play on one hole, but I can't recall which.
ICYMI, there are two other courses on site. Warrior Ridge is the best challenge (but has misleading tee signage), while Chickasaw is the best overall, and Tushka is... worth throwing while you're here.