stuamurr
Sitting Out
I don't play home games enough to speak on long-term durability. For me it comes down to design (pure preference) and thickness. I prefer bridge size and a bridge deck that can't bridge shuffle well is embarrassing. I have tested some of most of the "big" names listed here this week and have a few first experience impressions:
Personally still feel Copag is king for me. Thickness is perfect; easy shuffle but not too flimsy. Right in the sweet spot. And I like traditional design and Copag manages to pull it off with distinction.
I have warmed up to Kem a bit, but only in bridge. They are the flimisiest cards I have played with but it works for bridge. In poker size, forget about it.
Modiano are OK. I like the different options despite not loving the design or thickness.
Da Vinci were OK.
Fournier are OK. Kinda borderline for me. WSOP Fournier seem slightly thicker, to my disappointment.
Faded Spade let me down big time. I actually really like the design but they are too thick for my taste. Again, bridge sized cards that can't bridge smoothly are a thumbs down.
As it turns out most of these heralded brands actually seem "meh" to me in terms of feel. Copag I had already had impressions on and liked for quite a while, and recently Kem (again, only bridge size). The rest I only acquired this week. That said... the savior for me this week was Desjgn. I am fond of the design and the thickness was just right. Love these cards. Hopefully they hold up well because I see using them very often amongst my fave Copag/Kem decks, especially as I have become fond of 4-color decks lately.
Just my thoughts.
Bridge shuffling cards is generally not appreciated by poker players as the cards are easily seen during the shuffle and suggests an element of 'magic tricks' with the deck. A low tight riffle is far better as the cards cannot be seen during the shuffle process, usually a shuffle consists of a wash, deck reconstructed with the faces outwards thumbing the cards back into a landscape deck, riffle 3 times, three to five strips, another riffle then a final cut onto the cut card, keeping the cards low to the felt throughout.
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