Like I stated, the design isn't bad, but it's not terribly unique, either. It borrows from the designs of many other decks that came before it without bringing something new to the table. It needs something more to make it distinctive, to really set it apart from the crowd of minimalist decks aimed at magicians and cardists. The faces as they stand look a lot like other decks, most prominently the Smoke and Mirror series 1 through 6 (the series 7 decks are all 100% standard designs). The color scheme is like many casino decks and nearly every deck released by Theory11. The back is a simple, though elegant design - I can't swing a dead cat without hitting a dozen decks with the same type of back design.
I think the deck would really take off if there was just a little something different, something that made it stand out above the crowd. I've said this countless times on this forum: everyone remembers the first team to reach the peak of Mount Everest, but no one remembers the second, third, fifth, twelfth, etc. and certainly not the 34,288th. If you aren't the first to do something, you need to add something unique, something that makes you first, if you want people to stand up and pay attention. You could be on the 34,288th team to the top AND hold the first Burning Man Nepal up there - THEN you'd be remembered, you'd catch people's attention. This market is practically saturated with new decks.
There was a Chinese family that rented a retail space in my area and was looking to make a restaurant. There was already more than enough Chinese restaurants and they all seemed pretty interchangeable with each other, they were so close to identical. So they went a different route - they noticed that both Japanese cuisine and Mexican cuisine were practically non-existent, and not wanting to put all their eggs in one basket, they opened a Japanese-Mexican restaurant. I live in a region where 50% of all restaurants fail in the first two years - this family's going on nearly a decade now with no end in sight.