That is very interesting and I really like the special sealed box too!!
I am just curious about the box pictured below and the deck which it contains. Do you have more infos about it please ? Is it the only tuck box like that in existence?
Thank you
If I was forced to guess, it looks like another manufacturer's attempt to mimic without directly imitating the famous Bicycle design in order to sell his own, likely inferior, product. Counterfeiters of playing cards are all too common today - I once assisted Bill Schildman at USPC in tracking down US distributors of forged Bee playing cards of drastically inferior quality, and some of the more costly decks in the modern custom market have seen forgeries.
The most notorious forgeries would have to be the of the 1970 Jerry's Nugget decks of the types Lee Asher sells - his are completely legit, but the forgeries vary from exceptionally cheap knockoff to reasonable quality for a modern deck, and there are color variations that were never created for the casino's original print run, such as green decks and black decks. The off colors, I believe, were made in part as a way to try avoiding the wrath of eBay, which prohibits the sale of counterfeit merchandise of any kind - they were marketed as "imitations," "facsimiles," etc. But as these copies bore no such markings indicating anywhere they were copies, nor were they made with the permission of the casino, they get pulled whenever eBay finds them, either on their own or by the diligence of their account holders notifying them.
Even magician's decks aren't immune. Ellusionist makes a deck of Bicycle red Rider Back gaff cards called "Ultragaff" that retails for $29.95 and has a separately-sold series of three DVDs in increasing levels of difficulty with instruction on the use of these gaffs and card work in general, each volume of which is also $29.95. Members of this forum have posted about knock-offs of dubious origin of the Ultragaff being found for sale, believed to have been of Chinese origin. The fake decks are of fair but poorer quality compared to the original USPC-made product, and can be immediately identified by the multiple misspellings of various text found on the bottom of the box.
There's also a long history of other companies reprinting "abandoned" USPC card backs when the copyright on them expired, such as these Rally Playing Cards, available in paper and plastic from US Games Systems, using what appears to be an old Bicycle back, Automobile No. 1, listed as #13 in Robinson.