Hearing about the Limited Edition decks of Ace, curiosity got the better of me, so while I was at Barnes & Noble today, I decided to pick one of the decks (and it was the last one, maybe this was meant to be, lol).
So anyway, after getting home and opening the box and everything . . . heh . . . this deck
really makes me laugh.
First of all, I actually think this must have been a
used deck - I'm not kidding. There was no plastic shrinkwrap on the box, the seal was already broken (the box itself only had a piece of clear, plastic adhesive to seal it shut), the box itself has fraying, and when I took the deck out, it had clearly already been shuffled. Somebody must have
really hated this deck to return it. The box is even dated 2010, so these are six year old cards!
Anyway, as for the cards themselves, this is another reason why this deck has me laughing: the box describes how Cartamundi is the "most experienced playing card company in the world," and also notes that the Limited Edition deck was manufactured specifically with maximum durability in mind, and that it's, "perfect for the novice player and even prefered by the most discriminating card handlers on the world." That's why it makes me laugh, because it somehow reminds me of this guy's review of Cardinal's Professional Texas Hold 'Em cards:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3ergbQXT4EI mean these cards have a stock that is even thinner and flimsier than Bicycle's stock since moving their factory to Kentucky . . . not really sure how Cartamundi believes that's "maximum durability." The box doesn't note any kind of finish, but it's rougher and more coarse than Bee's finish. The cards themselves are like almost the entire opposite of what Cartamundi says on the box.
That said, I
do really like the two-colored back design as opposed to the single-colored back design of standard Ace decks you see in dollar stores; and because these Limited Edition cards are paper instead of plastic, the printing does look better, especially the court cards (which I mentioned in another thread, I really dislike about the Classic brand's plastic cards). I pretty much got the deck just for looks (and again, because of curiosity based on different reviews and thoughts I've seen of the deck), I don't think I'd use them very much for anything - with that thin and flimsy stock, I doubt they'd hold up in the long run.
Sorry for the bump, but I wanted to share that.