Wow. OK, I think you know my opinion hasn't changed with this new incarnation of the deck, but that's besides the point.
The real point is how in the hell is he planning to create, package and ship 1,152 decks (that's 8 gross, folks - 96 dozen) on a budget of $1,500? That's a fraction over $1.30 for each deck - for a run this short I don't even know of a printer that will make the decks that cheap, never mind the fulfillment! It's either being seriously subsidized or something's fishy in Newtropolis.
Assume everyone gets their decks at the cheapest asking price: $30 for four decks, or $7.50 each, with no international orders. Further assume that no other more costly add-ons are requested - everyone just wants cheap decks shipped within the US. It takes only 200 decks to reach the goal. But if that's it, if the project barely crosses the goal, they have a minimum of 200 decks to pack and ship. Call it 50 packages, which when added to packing material will come probably close to a pound each. Media mail rate is $2.69 each package, running to $134.50 just for postage - let's round it to $200 including the packing material.
This means in the best-case, just-met-goal-and-nothing-more scenario, this project has $1,300 left over to print the decks and a commitment to print 1,152 decks - cost per deck can't exceed just below $1.13 per deck.
That's not good.
If every deck is sold, and at the maximum price of $10 (not counting premiums for low serial numbers or autographs), the project will take in $11,520. Not much more than that, since there's only those premiums I mentioned. In such a situation, yes, I can see the project being a success at not just reaching the goal but at printing, packing and shipping the decks. But the odds of that happening? Let's just say I wouldn't want my life hanging on those odds.
There's a lot of wiggle room between the two extremes, but too many scenarios look like losing propositions to me.