Don, even I wouldn't bet my life on this new SWE deck being traditionally cut (after all, most Madison decks -- including Lions Den, which was DM's Casino deck) didn't have it. However, Madison's Private Reserve Rounders deck (with its print run of 2500) and the white Kings deck (which had a much larger print run) did feature a good ol' traditional cut... and so whilst chances do appear to be low, I wouldn't completely rule it out.
I do agree that the USPCC claim that traditional cutting doesn't produce as good results, is nothing more than BS brought about by laziness.
Don, would you say then Smith MD no.3 is made closer to 100% of what Bill Kalush is aiming for?
To what standard is he aiming for? is it the JN deck?
If I am not wrong D&D were involved in the Erdnaseum Deck, but I am not really liking it. Hence I haven't really tried other Erdnase Deck.
Seeing how you and Jesal actually speaking good things of 216, made me want to own at least 1 to try it out.
The intended feel of CARC's BEE 216 was deck was that of the original BEE deck from Erdnase's time... so it wasn't really the JN feel that they were after for that particular deck. The reason why the BEE 216 felt around 85% similar to the original was because in previous decades the coating was some sort of varnish that was applied to the cards... but these days, the coating and its application is totally different (Don has written about this quite a few times in the past year -- search through his posts, if you're interested brother). Therefore, the BEE 216 ended up being a little more slippery than the original.
As for the intended feel of EPCC's Master Finish decks... like Don, even I wouldn't be surprised if Bill K's end goal is to replicate the feel of the JNs. The exact same technology probably isn't around, because they used some rather strange chemicals in the 70s which may not be available today...
With the technology that LPCC and EPCC have available today, I think they can surpass JNs (in fact, I think they already have surpassed it). The diamond/master finish decks are as durable as cards get, and at present, the coating is quite incredible.
Try comparing the feel of Legends V1, Legends V2, Legends V3, and then something like the LUXX V2 -- in each progression, the paper thickness is different, and the coating has become slicker, and longer lasting. The improvement each time is awesome!
Going back to the topic, Ellusionist have never printed a mainstream deck (their gaff deck doesn't count!) outside of USPCC... and so sadly, this deck could end up with the usual BS combination of BEE + embossed finish + magic finish coating