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Tolarian Winds: Card Stock Quality and Consumer Confidence - A Magic: The Gathering VLOG

Be sure to check out Tolarian Winds: "Pro Tour Ad Nausea" - my Magic: The Gathering Vlog: https://youtu.be/uy4BESjEMX8 Tolarian Community College is brought to you by Card Kingdom! You can support The Professor just by checking out their store through this link: http://www.cardkingdom.com/TCC TCC Shirts! Playmats! - http://www.tolariancommunitycollege.com/ Or you can support me directly over at Patreon -https://www.patreon.com/tolariancommunitycollege Twitter: https://twitter.com/TolarianCollege FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/TolarianCommunityCollege A Guide To The Best TCG Products and Accessories of 2016! Magic: The Gathering, Pokemon and More: https://youtu.be/gVseWNsM7eo A Critical Review of the new Dex Protection Portfolios: https://youtu.be/7bXNeJk7RPU Come hang out and play Magic with me on Twitch: http://www.twitch.tv/tolariancommunitycollege Music Courtesy Of: "Vintage Education" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ "Airport Lounge" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ On Friday, October 20th 2017 Wizards fo the Coast released a statement letter customers know that quote unquote “A number of non-foil, double-sided Ixalan cards in English, Portuguese, Spanish, Chinese (Traditional), Chinese (Simplified), and Korean were mistakenly printed on the incorrect card stock.” Communication and transparency between company and customer in a situation like this is key, but unfortunately, this is not the statement on card stock we are looking for. Much of what I am going to present in here can be called anecdotal evidence, However, I am also going to try and demonstrate that these issues with card stock, NOT the ones Wizards released a statement on, but the real issues with cardstock that result in the curling and warping of non-foil cards from new sets, that these issues are consistent enough that I can reliably recreate them just by opening brand new booster packs. But the point of this video isn’t prove the card stock problem is real. The point is to say that in the interest of consumer confidence, wizards of the coast needs to acknowledge the problem and tell their customers what they know. We, as those customers need to change from trying to demonstrate this issue is real, to asking for an official statement on it. It’s hard to pinpoint exactly when the card stock quality began to decline, however, we do know when it was at its worst: Amonkhet Block. These are cards from my personal collection. They are unplayed. They were opened by me a few months ago and placed in storage. There are indeed multiple issues with card stock in our newer magic sets, the worst of which is the curling of cards. That you see here. This is probably due to the card thickness appearing to be different than in the past. Cards feel less thick, more malleable. Many report the bend test is not as reliable as it once was. Inking issues seem highly prevalent as well. Many cards having poor or faded inking, grey borders and other coloring problems. Now, I feel very confident that the vast majority of you already knew about this issue. If you have been on reddit, if you have been on MTG Salvation, if you have been on Twitter, if you have been on Facebook or, if nothing else, if you have just BOUGHT Magic cards in this last year then you likely know that something has gone wrong. These issues are rampant, not just a few poor souls who have gotten a bad batch or problematic printing, but rather, a widespread reporting of accounts that it is not only numerous but, I feel is both repeatable and demonstrable. I do not know what the problem is. I can make educated guesses, but in the end that’s all they are guesses. A lower quality of card stock being used, perhaps, or complications and quality control issues with the printers themselves, maybe. Testing seems to indicate that cards printed outside the usa in belgian factories, these are cards meant for japan and germany, that these have the original or near to it quality of card stock. But who can say for certainty in this situation. As I said at the start of this video, so much of this comes down to anecdotal evidence pieced together by customer. But. I do not need to fully understand the cause of this problem to know it exists. It exists and Wizards of the coast has not comments on it, and they must. They must. Why? Consumer confidence is being hit hard by this, and in many way, that is almost as bad as the bad cardboard quality itself. I cannot stress the direness of a trading card game maker making poor quality trading cards. A statement acknowledging this should have happened awhile ago, and I like many others naively assumed that the only reason it had not was that the issues would be 100% resolved with Ixalan. They have not been. It is time to comment on this.

Comments

Anonymous

I noticed the difference of thickness in some recent cards as well, and I've only just started playing. I'm a little OCD, but I thought I might be crazy...

Anonymous

I always like to evaluate WoTC's deeds in the long run, historical perspective. I believe they have done an amazing job at consistently delivering a top-notch product (in the overall sense) throughout the years. If you take a look at every single company that has lasted at least as much as them, I believe it's safe to say that very few -regardless what they do- can boast to be as consistent as they have. Having said that, this is my perspective and it's settled on my experience and my personal relationship with the game. So, I deem this video very healthy. You are providing a different perspective, and approaching this issue from a different angle, and I appreciate that you cover that base for me, for us. Thank you! Keep at it.

Anonymous

I don't have a ton of older cards but a few from the first sets of magic and when I compared the cards as you did in the video it struck me how those were just absolutely flat and looked better than cards from a fresh Ixalan booster. Even after over 20 years of tumbling around in random boxes under various conditions! I'm absolutely certain that if I hadn't rediscovered my old cards and found them in such good condition I wouldn't have gotten back into magic (a serious hobby at this point). It would be beyond sad if I couldn’t leave my cards to someone to play with in the future due to the makers of the cards shaving pennies off production (or perhaps just negligence, which is somehow worse).

Anonymous

I noticed the entire pool of Ixalan cards (from standard booster box, not the prerelease pack) I recently got for a sealed event were so thin that the slide up to the top of the sleeve in the Ultra Pro sleeves. I have never seen this happen before. They slide up with very little card handling, just holding them and lightly shuffling. Moreover, the printing was shoddy on the same cards across all the packs (probably about 1/10 of them), where the text was misprinted, smudged and weak. Anyone else notice this?

Anonymous

Older cards just feel and wear better than any of the newer sets. A time when us older folks actually had it easier than the youngins. I shall only play unlimited through 5th edition forevermore. .... just kidding.

Anonymous

That feeling when you sleeve an Ixalan card....and it STILL warps.