To answer the question, I think as soon as I turned the corner on #1 after a mundane housing constrained tee shot.The rest of the holes, if you see something you don't love, you simply can look the other direction and be wowed-and I was.
Back when I was giving Niall the benefit of the doubt, I thought he might be making the point that Tyson knocked guys out early and often, whereas Pebble's biggest punches come in rounds 6-10, 17, and 18. Which would've been a fair quibble to my comparing it to early Tyson while advocating for boxing scoring over match play when evaluating courses.
But Jeff makes a point that I kept coming back to. There's something on damn near every hole on that course that connects, and as other guys are mentioning, also punches that connect prior to even getting onto the course.
That whole pro shop/practice green/first tee connection is one-of-a-kind. As soon as I'm staring at the backside of the first tee as I arrive "inside the arena," I realize "I'd rather be here than 70% of courses I've played."
And that funky benched first green? Take the number up to 80%.
The barranca on 2, rounding the corner on 3... awesome stuff.
But Josh calls out a hell of an early knockout blow. Like, I don't love the way Pebble feints around 3 green. There's a lot of concrete and infrastructure in that area, for sure. So when you step out into the heart of hole 4, the reveal of the bay and 6 looming in the distance doesn't have the same elegance of arriving in 3 fairway at Bandon Trails and realizing that you're surrounded by a whole new type of nature than everything you've seen since arriving on the premises.
But that lack of elegance almost makes the punch more devastating. You go from "damn that's a nice beach club" to "yikes holy crap this isn't a fair fight" instantly. If you're talking about the hundreds of courses you'd rather play 10+ times at that moment, I'm throwing the towel and getting you examined for a head injury.