Don, I'm not disputing that there are other decks out there from other companies... but the problem that I have is that all of the companies (at least the ones whose decks I've tried) with the borderless, repeating designs have quality that is either not much better (and sometimes even worse!) than that of USPCC.
I've tried Cartamundi, and Gemaco, amongst others, and the combination of stock and coating that they use was inferior to even the Bee deck!
The first edition MPC deck was one of the last few that I tried, and although the stock wasn't the world's worst, the design was one way, and due to the cutting method, the edges chipped even worse than any of the USPCC decks.
Therefore just having lots of variety isn't the issue -- it's the quality of the variety. If it's all mediocre, then the fact that there is variety is pretty much irrelevant... after all, having lots of garbage to choose from isn't exactly something that appeals to me.
The only such deck that impressed me was the Ascal decks that our resident legend, Lee Asher, has on his website -- the stiff and durable cardstock is excellent (better than even USPCC from their Ohio days, in my opinion), and once broken in, the coating is pretty cool also. The fact that they're traditionally cut is brilliant also. Although they are boderless and do have a repeating back pattern, they also have a mirrored casino logos placed in the usual spot... and so second and bottom deals are not as deceptive as they could have been, had the logos not been there.
Don, you've been in the game a lot longer than I have, and I'm taking it for granted that you've handled a much larger variety of cards than I have... and so if you can point me to a specific, high quality, borderless deck with a repeating borderless design, then I'm definitely all ears brother.
Until then though, in my mind, a borderless version of Paul's latest design, on LPCC's diamond finish would feature very very high on my wish list.