I've always thought there was a quite a difference between those that Pete obvious spent alot of time, and perhaps had more funding, then those that included fewer visits or were completed mostly by his family.
Here's my Pete Dye resume:
Great: Brickyard Crossing, Crooked Stick, Oak Tree, Pete Dye GC....really liked all of these, CS is probably my #4 here.
Good: Wintonbury Hills (perhaps belongs above), Kampen, The Fort (w/Liddy), Chatham Hills (opened this year), Eagle Pines @ Disney (NLE, under the new 4 Seasons), Woodland CC, Paiute Wolf....all of these are/were worth a game, if not top shelf.
OK: Trump National CA, Eagle Creek (an early Dye muni on great land)...not terrible but with flaws.
Jury's Out:
French Lick Dye...I know it's supposed to be a showcase project, but I thought it was forced, too long, required HUGE cuts and fills to make it work, and the whimsical touches like the volcano bunkers were pointless. It's a pretty place to be, and not the worst course ever, but add the fact that it's $300+ to play and ugh. I'd play the Ross course and it's epic par threes about 15 more times before I would play this again.
Old Quarry (Curacao)...This one is on a seaside property and has a few great holes, but the majority of it is cramped target golf. I played it when it was only a year old or less on a winter vacation, but I would bet the local infrastructure will have a tough time maintaining it correctly to be playable for resort guests. Though I guess this applies to much of Caribbean golf anywhere you go.
Other Dye family courses I've played:
Rum Pointe (PB?)...this would be in the "ok"...fine but not really memorable.
Riverdale Dunes (Perry?)...good
Boone Valley (PB)...good, #1 course in MO at times
Royal Links (Perry)...Fun, Vegas is the PERFECT place for this!
I still think while Pete has built some great courses, his greatest legacy will be the tree of architects he employed/educated/ influenced, as well as his daring to re-inject the quirkiest of traditional features (railroad ties and blindness as opposed to ground game, for instance) into modern US golf.