I only opened the standard, im already thinking of trading or selling an original edition, those were like 20 bones each, If i were to bet, Id say all are the same stock.
Its a air-cusion style finish, but no where near as good,
Dribbles are bad, springs are not too bad cus its soft
The cards are thick but not stiff (no snap), youll notice it is a pretty thick tuck.
Also, Card holds form, so bends can easily create gaps.
So not as easy to handle, manipulate, or play poker with.
I wouldnt play poker with them, I love the back design on the original edition,
i got 1 ad-card with that back in the standard
i am very curious to see what your opionion
Thank you for bringing this whole thing up cere23!
I popped the standard and while I didn't use these for a game and I don't know if I will at all to be honest. (solitaire) I see the root of the problem you, me, and probably everyone else is and will be having. It jumped out at me as soon as I pulled the deck from the tuck and started my tests for evaluating a deck. The Die used to cut the cards from the sheet is bad. It's not only long in the tooth and dull, it's become distorted if it was ever created properly in the first place. Instead of cutting through the stock it's using pressure to power through the stock. This creates a lip around the edges of the cards, a burr if you will. This stops the cards from moving as easily as you'd like them to. It happens, it's not a grave error it's just use and probably lazy maintenance.
What KILLS this deck in terms of the use I had planned this deck for, is the upper left corner of the deck. It's distorted almost to the point of Game Crafter, the worst cut cards I have had the misfortune of coming across, making these the second worst. I wonder if it's the same company that Game Crafter uses for it's playing cards with some repairs done to the crap die they used.
I found the stock to be acceptably thin and it's soft however, not in the good way. The card stock is not very resilient at all. Taking the blank face card and bending from upper corner to opposite side lower corner it should spring back when released. This stock doesn't spring back, it's more a mosey back and stops when it's decided it's good enough. This is not a broken in deck we're talking about, it's fresh out of the tuck! They shouldn't do that, they should be springy. When these are broken in they're going to have a very limp feel which could be good for some manipulations but not good for what I'd use the deck for. I do not live in a humid environment, I'm a lizard that lives in the desert so it's not humidity that's at work here. Some folks may really like a stock that behaves this way. It's great for those that do.
I think the stock will hold up to rips and tears that happen with use over time fairly well. Much better than a holiday themed dollar store deck for example, which tend to start having rips and tears after a half an hour of friendly blackjack/poker play. I don't believe it will hold up as well as some of the other brands we're more familiar with although time will tell. Maybe someone who decides to use these for an extended period of time over the coming months will be able to weigh in and let us know.
I and likely most of us could salvage this deck from it's poor cut error if I felt like clamping it down and sanding the nub out of the corner. I'm not going to do that because I prefer a pick up and go deck of playing cards and only modify when it's special to me or a close friend. Speaking of which, I wouldn't recommend putting in the effort to gild this deck either due to the burr along edges. Some people may like that for a gild though as it gives some quick surface area. I don't and would have to sand the thing too much because the burr is a good size on my deck.
The standard version deck we're talking about here is an $8 deck. I think this has to be taken into account when we're talking about the quality of the deck. Purely from a stock and cut standpoint which is what we've been talking about in the thread. I'm going to be honest and say it's better than some $1 dollar store decks, some. Where it succeeds is in the design, it's a great deck from that aspect and I really like it a lot.
They are of the highest quality and I know we will only be able to achieve similar results as we have in the past, by holding every element of the process to the highest standards. - Kickstarter 1864 Restoration - Saladee's Patent Deck of Playing Cards
This line makes me curious about the Original release and Weathered decks. I didn't go in for the Weathered deck because I'm not keen on faux aging etc. Might be a bit before I crack the OR version and have a peek at those.
Edit: this is long so for some folks. TLDR Edit 2: Photo of card upper left corner.