Thank you Don for responding. Yes, I addressed and resolved the issue 2 minutes after I received the email.
Now THAT'S what I call customer service!
The Private Reserves on the other hand have perfect registration. This was accomplished through the meticulous work from the EPCC.
They seem to be on the money every time, EPCC and LPCC, when it comes to registration. I'm still scratching my head and wondering what the heck USPC is doing wrong - after 133 years of printing playing cards, they haven't solved their registration issues, while the printer Expert and Legends share probably has only been around for a fraction of that length of time and they always get it right. USPC can't even use the excuse of the equipment being old and worn - they opened a brand new facility in 2009.
I would kind of like to receive a deck with registration issues. I like the "rarity" value of this. I think this is from my knowledge of stamps. If there is a misprint on a stamp the value of it is so much higher.
I know playing cards and stamps are different entities, and I would ask for a replacement too. Just thought it should be noted how "rare" a misprint is.
There are some collectors like you, Rose, who place a premium value on a misprinted or incorrectly assembled pack of cards. Sometimes the misprints are so bad, the results may actually be useful as gaff cards! But a much-larger number of collectors want their decks perfect and pristine. They driver dealers nuts at times because of how persnickety they can be over the slightest of faults, like a nearly-invisible dent on the tuck box or loose cellophane.
Mind you, many of these decks will rarely if ever see the light of day again, tucked away deep in someone's hidey-hole for their stash...you'd think some collectors were stocking up for the nuclear winter or the zombie apocalypse...