I have played only two of DM Kidd’s courses—Bandon Dunes and Huntsman Springs—but Huntsman seemed a striking example of visual deception. Many times during the round the correct line of play looked exactly the opposite. For example, a bunker on a ridge that completely hides a wide landing area beyond. On greens playing away from pins and using the contours to get close. Of course Huntsman was totally manufactured on top of a mountain meadow (a swampy bog really) and is a very impressive work of imagination and execution, along the likes of Shadow Creek, IMO.
A personal anecdote about Huntsman: I played it in a 2-man scramble with a shotgun start. We happened to get paired with a pro and his superintendent. Those two spent a good deal of time critiquing the course and design, mostly unfavorably and focusing on the obvious cost of it all. Finally, after about 16 holes of listening to this, we were standing on tee box and chatting about how to play a hole. The DZ of the obvious line ended in a very narrow section of fairway pinched-in between a hazard and a dune or bunker—the very essence of a risk/reward route to the green. The pro complained about this “unfair” feature. I’d never seen or played the hole before, but I’d seen enough of the visual deception going on that I bet the pro a six pack that an alternate line over a ridge-line group of bunkers would reveal a wide, hidden landing zone. He took the bet and lost. Unfortunately, they didn’t sell beer in the house (Mormon owners). (Due to the shotgun start, I’m not sure which hole it was.)
The point being that the pro and his super mostly misunderstood what the architect was doing with the design. They won the event from the middle tees we were playing, but the pro had played the course a couple of weeks before and apparently got a full dose the challenges from the tips. Guess he was still smarting from getting beat up the first time around. FWIW, I thought it was one of the most strategic and interesting designs I’ve played as well as an amazing feat of hydrological engineering. It is a fun, playable track despite having some form of water on something like 16 of 18 holes. It’s really worth seeing and well worth the drive to this isolated destination. Yeah, there is much eye candy and big budget excess on display that will probably render this course as a billionaire developer’s work of art and will require substantial years of subsidy to exist, so see it while you can.