David T,
You'd fork over $400 to play the course so you can walk forward 1000 yards so you could challenge the par 4s? What happened to your golf should be cheap for all ethos?
TF has become my personal favorite in north Texas. If I was 10 years younger and the club would accept my application, I'd fork over the low six-figure initiation fee and use two hands to write the check for the monthly dues. It is that much fun.
C & C have proven to my satisfaction that they are at the top of their profession with only relatively few peers. The site was hardly one that could be called advantaged, both physically or from a real estate perspective (Location³). Though you can find a sizable population in Dallas who would vehemently dispute Ran's characterization of the land as "useless" prior to construction, I couldn't agree more with his sentiments (for the same reasons why I was so deeply disappointed with the Coul Links decision).
There is a lot more to "the story" than what is related here. I've enjoyed 7 or 8 rounds at TF since 2017 and but for one time, maybe in the first year, it has played more like a parkland on heavy soil. The lush, tightly-mowned zoysia fairways feel on the feet like they're on a thick carpet pad. We've had three or four wet years in a row and the club has been re-grassing parts of the fairway peripheries, but at least during my visits in April, June and August of this year, the course has not played like it was designed. Hopefully I'll get back before the end of the year and find conditions similar to those described.
As to the individual holes, there is not a weak one among them, but I do have a couple that I am not fond of. In the new configuration, the long #4 doesn't fit my eye and it can set the tone for the round. We looked at the hole carefully with one of the shapers as it was being roughed in and he expressed concern about how much it cantered from left-to-right toward the forest floor (it is a bit disconcerting to me that around the southern and western edges of the course, the grade is in line with the surrounding forest canopy). They did a great job of tiering the landing zone, but even in soft conditions, it is easy to lose the tee shot unless hit with hook spin to the left third of the fairway (200+ yards to the green with the ball well below your feet in high zoysia rough is no easy shot). #9 has a similar problem, this time in the opposite direction, R-t-L slope toward the forest floor.
#13 is another long 4 that requires a strong drive to a smallish LZ for a shorter approach. Long hitters will go with something less than a driver and be left with a mid to shortish iron. Distance-deprived players like me will risk a driver to maybe have a hybrid left to a difficult green bunkered on the left.