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Playing Cards

Choosing the Right Deck for Your Home Game

Paper or Plastic?

The short answer is plastic. Cards come in two basic types: plastic cards and paper cards coated in plastic. Paper cards will typically last a few games before they become too limp to easily shuffle and play with. Plastic cards will typically last a couple years.

You can use a single deck in your game but you will speed things up by having two decks with different color backs such as red and blue. Cards sold this way are referred to as a "setup". This allows the game to continue with the red deck for example, while someone other than the dealer shuffles the blue deck to get ready for the next hand. Having different color card backs prevents the decks from mixing while both being on the table.

Red and blue card backs from a single setup of playing cards
A standard setup — one red deck, one blue deck, sold together

Size Matters

Decks will come in either a bridge size or poker size. Bridge size is smaller at 2.25″ wide while poker is 2.5″ wide and both are typically 3.5″ high. Some people prefer bridge size because they are easier on the hands when dealing and can be easier to handle when playing a game that requires you to have more than two cards in your hand.

Bridge size vs poker size playing cards side by side
Bridge (2.25″) on the left, poker (2.5″) on the right

Anatomy of a Card

Card faces are made up of values and suits which are represented in the corner of the card. "Pips" refers to the corner of the card representing that value and "index" refers to the size of those pips. Common choices for index are Standard and Jumbo. Pips usually come in two or four corners.

Cards are also available in a four-color version and come with unique pip options such as Fournier's "Poker Peek" corners which can make it easier to see when bending the corner of a card up to read it at the table.

Playing card with standard index and two pips
Standard index, two pips
Playing card with jumbo index and two pips
Jumbo index, two pips
Fournier Poker Peek cards with large pips
Fournier Poker Peek index

4-Color Decks

An optional format where diamonds are blue and clubs are green (rather than all red/black). Makes suit-reading easier, especially in Omaha and Stud where suits matter more. Not everyone loves the look, but it's worth trying.

Four-color deck with four-corner pips
Four-color deck — blue diamonds, green clubs — with four-corner pips

Security Ink

Cards can also come in what is known as "security ink" which offers better contrast to casino video surveillance. Note that the red used in security ink decks is very dark and can be confused for black at a home game where lighting might be less than perfect.

Copag Poker Pro vs Casino Pro security ink comparison
Copag Poker Pro (left) vs CasinoPro (right) — the CasinoPro uses UV-reactive security ink

Care and Feeding of Your Cards

You can clean plastic cards but it should be done selectively to cards that need it. Fading can occur after washing.

Typical cleaning instructions are as follows (from copagcards.com):

  1. Use cold water. Never use hot water. Avoid warm water. Try cleaning your cards with cold water with no soap to start.
  2. Use a non abrasive cloth and gently wash the playing cards individually. Do not use a paper towel or any other paper based towel products. Definitely avoid any sort of abrasive scrubbing material.
  3. Clean only a few cards at a time.
  4. Rub very lightly on both sides.
  5. Inspect your cards to ensure they are clean. If water only did not clean your cards then wash the cards again with a neutral soap. A neutral soap is a soap that is not alkaline or acidic. The pH balance for a neutral soap is 4. The most commercially identifiable pH neutral soap is Dove. We recommend Dove soap when just plain water will not work.
  6. Once a clean card is achieved, dry thoroughly at once using a clean soft non abrasive cloth.
  7. Spread cards on a table and allow up to one hour on each side to air dry.

For detailed reviews of specific decks — KEM Arrow, Copag Centennial, Modiano Platinum, and more — visit our Card Reviews section.

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