Two notable decks came out recently with an emphasis placed on discovering secrets about them, namely the Altruism deck from TBC and the Sultan Republic deck from E. At first, I had little interest in either of these decks, and the promise of "secrets" didn't really encourage me to buy either deck. When the Sultan Treasury deck was revealed, I actually liked that deck more than the original and ordered them. (Ironically, I now will probably buy the original deck to complete the set).
I thought it would be worthwhile discussing this concept:
Is it a good idea? I find it to be essentially marketing, and would rather have the deck be sold on its design than the possibility that you could find some mystery about the deck, but that's just one man's opinion.
Do you think more and more decks will begin to use this idea? The fact that the Sultan Treasury deck created such a commotion might be a springboard for other companies to feed off the hype that was generated by it. Of course it might not last a long time, but anything could happen.
Is it fair to do this? Not everyone is getting an equal opportunity at a limited deck release, and people have been taking advantage of a lack of information and selling the deck for much higher than it is currently selling for on E. It's debatable whether or not limiting a deck release to people who bought a different deck is fair, considering that there wasn't really any deception in saying that the secret would only be available to those who bought the first deck.
Do you think that decks that otherwise wouldn't sell, for whatever reason (bad/uninspired design, lack of creativity, lack of interest, etc.), would end up selling more than they should because of the promise of secrets found in the deck itself? I really think this is a possibility given the hype created by the Sultan Treasury deck.
Will the playing card industry suffer or benefit from this concept? Could we see a decline in deck quality, with more emphasis placed on secrets?
That's kind of a lot of questions, but I think it's worth discussing.