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« on: October 04, 2018, 11:47:55 PM »
I agree. There are some who into Golden Nugget Casino decks. It is whatever floats ones boat. If the seller wants to sell it and the buyer agrees with the sellers price, then the transaction takes place. Mind you, another seller may post the same exact GN deck for $5 and when no ones looking someone who wants it may buy it without a second thought believing that the first deck was overpriced, but the second posted GN deck was set at a reasonable one. Frankly, I'm not into GN decks, was familiar with the decks in the 70s, when the casino was practically giving them away, and had no particular desire for one not knowing that some go crazy over those, among others.
What you need to do when valuating a card or deck is (a) condition (sealed, unsealed, used, excellent condition, good, fair, etc.) (b) is the card/deck commonly on the market or not so much (e.g. can I buy it on eBay, Etsy, Amazon? 52 Plus Convention? If so, is one source more reasonable than the others?) (d) category (is it in a popular category (e.g. steam ships, airlines, beer) (e) If advertising, is the company out of business? (f) Is the card a joker, ace of spade, or facecard? If so, is the joker, ace or face card very unique or unusual?
There are likely other questions to consider when placing a value on cards or decks. The collector needs to decide what to collect, but in playing cards, its easy to get distracted. Find a category that you like and collect it. Don't let others dissuade you with their likes, but hearing or reading what they think may help you to better appreciate or understand, which may have an impact upon what you collect. In the end, just have fun. Know when to say when.