You pledged for this? Well...it's not really my cup of toxic sludge.
First, let's consider the title. "Surf Monsters from Outer Space." What I see on the courts and Aces are a bunch of images stolen from notable movies of the past several decades, everything from Metropolis to the Wizard of Oz to cheesy '50s B-movies to the Rocky Horror Picture Show - no "surf monsters" to be seen anywhere. There's such a shortage of originality, there are two court cards, the Jack of Clubs and the King of Hearts, that have nearly identical images on them! And they all appear on a "decorative" background that looks like someone tossed some watercolor paint on the wall and let it drip for too long, using colors more commonly found in infected wounds.
The one attempt at real originality is in the placement of the pips on the spot cards - but unfortunately, "original" and "good" are not the same thing. They look terrible and hard to read, with no actual single color to any of the suits or even the individual pips, all thanks to that same disease-ridden pattern used on the background of the courts being recycled to act as the filler material for the pips on each card.
The idea of the test pattern for the deck back isn't a bad one, but it might have looked better if a) it, too, wasn't in those diseased colors previously mentioned, b) it wasn't a one-way design and c) it wasn't simply copied from the original instead of being altered to fit the medium - the original design had a width-to-height ratio of 4:3 or 1.33:1 (NTSC standard), while the back of a playing card turned sideways is 7:5 or 1.4:1. With the test pattern centered in the middle of the card, this leaves the top and bottom of each card blank and devoid of any pattern beyond the puke-a-tronic background. A real artist could have altered this design to make it fit the card - this designer either chose not to or couldn't.
Tin box not withstanding, this deck isn't worth even close to $12 a pack, which is the non-early bird price for a single pack. I could guess just by looking at the teeny, tiny goal amount that the deck was being produced by MakePlayingCards.com, so we're looking at computer-printed as opposed to using an offset press - I'd be hard-pressed myself to say that such a deck is worth the price of admission.
This is actually the second attempt for this project. Madden made the first attempt only earlier this month, letting it run for just under a week before pulling the plug - I'm guessing it has to do with the $4,500 goal and higher per-deck price. That attempt raised a mere $311 and the current version is standing pat at $318 on a goal of $880, with funding being flat for nearly the past week. Kicktraq is predicting the same fate for this project as for the last.