...and how do you know there aren't MORE goals that just haven't been reached yet?
I do love those secret stretch goals!
And maybe it's silly of me to have an expectation of what 'Stretch Goals' means based on the way it has been nearly exclusively used on virtually every other Kickstarter project that uses the term, but I think it's somewhat reasonable to have expectations.
Is it so outrageous that the project creator might be even remotely culpable for using a term that has a generally accepted concept format based on it's history of use? I can't be that far removed from reality.
That's all him, no one else.
And c'mon now Don, don't patronize me, it's not just me, I believe CardFool above expressed the same irritation not even 8 posts back. As well as users at UC and I'm pretty sure I saw one person in the project comments express the same irritation.
Here it is, plain and simple. He offered a very common stretch goal - a new color pattern of the same deck for which the project was created. I have seen countless project before it offer the same thing and no one was surprised or shocked. You're still hanging on to a belief that "stretch goal" and "backer freebie" are one and the same. They are not. Period. Nothing more to say about it, really. You almost sound as if you'd have preferred he offer no stretch goal at all, nothing extra for anyone.
Hanson Chien Production Company? Does he have his own printer? Or is this part of the joke?
Speculation was USPCC based on them having printed the Jerry's Nuggets originally, but I don't know that that was ever confirmed by the creator. I believe.. Expert and Legends use a Taiwan printer..? Help me out here Don, I know I have seen you talk about this before but can't find where..
The project page says exactly who is printing it - and it isn't USPC. It's some firm called HCPC in Taiwan, who is supposedly using the "uses the original Jerry’s Nugget color spec provided by U.S. Playing Card Company" - that baloney, because there's no way USPC even kept the records from forty-six years ago! But that also doesn't matter, because with color-matching technology being what it is today, anyone can reproduce a color with a very high degree of accuracy - they do it in the paint section of any big-box hardware store countless times a day.
The goal alone should have clued you in - there's no way he's making two deck colors with USPC on a budget of only $5,000, even with the new 1,000-deck minimum print run size, not without subsidizing.
It appears that, technically speaking, they may have bent if not broken the rules for a Kickstarter project. With all the photos and reviews and the phrasing used in a lot of the copy, it appears that the decks, at least the red and blue ones, have already been printed - a test run at the least, if not a full-blown production run. You're not supposed to run a KS project for something that's already been made, so if was exists today was anything more than a test run or a handful of prototypes, shame on them. Not that KS really cares, as long as they collect the fees when the project closes and no one bitches that they're being ripped off somehow, which they don't appear to be.