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Silver Card Talk Member |
Nobody else has reported, so I'll start. Two boxes, each 24 packs of 6 cards. Expect 1.82 76-card base sets on average; I got a complete set in each box but the extras were clumpy. 2 autograph ("Showdown Signature") cards (out of 37) per box, as advertised. I pulled Sammy Farha, Jerry Buss, Amir Vahedi, and Erik Seidel. The Farha seems to be one of the top 5 in combination of rarity and demand. None of the only other insert, four event-worn autographed apparel cards ("Poker Paraphernalia"), seeded at 1:case (1:288 packs). Signature cards are on thick stock, probably the same thickness as the signed shirt cards to discourage searching for the latter somewhat. The images are sharp and have variety, and the card text is pretty good. Base cards are silver-foil stamped. I call it a good first foray into poker cards. The auto cards follow the Topps lead of signatures on stickers that are then applied to the cards. The only excuse that I see for this trend is that some manufacturers may have been burned by "lost or damaged" cards that then showed up later in the aftermarket, and you have to admit that they have a lot more control over the material. (Nobody's going to pay the same amount for a signed sticker, and the "official" signatures can go straight into packs.) But still I don't like it. Billy Drago would never have achieved card-collecting stardom that way; there's no chance for lesser variations or messages; and it makes for a cramped signature if you have a long name or you sign with a flourish. | ||
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Gold Card Talk Member |
i didnt tart this as it was not non sport and thought i wpould of got told of lol but i do want some of these ____________________ | |||
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Silver Card Talk Member |
Some people say "It's not a sport if you can drink beer while you're competing." My general rule is that "sports cards" as a collecting community involve the major five professional men's sports, baseball, basketball, hockey, American football, and soccer. People who collect auto-racing or golf cards are aligned more with the non-sports-cards community than with the sports carders. I would put Rittenhouse's WNBA sets right on the conceptual borderline, but wouldn't complain about them because (again) a different group of people collect them than the typical sports-carders. Oh, and World Wrestling Entertainment says it in their name; wrestling sets are TV-related, not sports. | |||
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Gold Card Talk Member |
I AGREE THERE I WOULDNT CLASS IT AS A SPORT PART OF A FUN TEST OR GAME LOL. whoops didnt realise i had caps on sorry ____________________ | |||
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Silver Card Talk Member |
it shouldnt be a sport, if being blinding drunk doesnt nessacarily hurt your ability to play it, ala gavin smith. ____________________ Evacuate? In our moment of triumph? I think you overestimate their chances! | |||
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Member |
Just ran across this thread today. Purchased a box shortly after these cards were released. Came up 4 commons shy of a full set, but had over 50 extras. Good thing was I pulled three autos A13 - Antonio Esfandaiari A18 - Chip Jett A26 - Gavin Smith Cool set. Glad I picked it up!!! | |||
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Member |
Few years late, but I just bought 3 boxes. Complete base set in each (though I got 4 copies of card #1 and #11 in each box). Box 1: Chris Moneymaker, Phil Laak Box 2: Chris Moneymaker, TJ Cloutier Box 3: David Williams, Josh Arieh Overall, I really liked the cards. Good design, nice thick Auto card stock - though with 37 packed autos, I was extremely disappointed getting a duplicate. | |||
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