RichK wrote:Sprouts,
I was kidding. I don't understand the allure of just changing the deck color and expect people to buy it to keep their "set" complete. Yes the blue/teal is a great color as is the maroon but the designers, not just this deck either, I feel aren't pushing themselves for new and creative. I'm sure a yellow with light gray deck would be just as nice looking but I feel it's an easy way out to make another deck with their name on it.
If someone wants to enlighten me on why they like just a color change of multiple decks I'd be happy to learn.
Now I have to drink heavily to try to forget those pictures!
I know that traditionally playing cards adopted a two color set concept to accommodate poker players that would rotate the deck they played with, it's common practice to have one deck in play and a second deck at the ready for game two, and then switch back and forth between the two each subsequent game, and using the same deck (same color) can be confusing or cause problems, so it became popular practice to use two different colors of the same decks.
When I play poker with my buddies we use one red and one blue bike deck.
Red and blue are the most common color variants, I assume because of the availability and use of red and blue bikes, exemplifying the standard set of playing cards. And the color variant idea kind of took off from that tradition and now is just accepted as a bit of a playing card design standard, in part a nod to that tradition and partially in accommodation of poker players that want to have matching pairs of decks they can play with.