We regularly planed the face off cards - like forests - and glued on a colour copy of a pricey card in its place.
But since we were good people, and even though the fakes would fool a kid or a noob, and even shuffle and cut the same, we intentionally sprinkled the copier with yellow confetti so each fake would have some obvious yellow dots.
And we’d ensure everyone knew: “these 6 cards are proxies for these other 6 cards, and in an ante game you win the real card with the proxy. Fair?” It was usually cool.
Our white-hat counterfeiting game was on point. And card sleeves were lame. ;-)
I mean, I played with people who would just scrawl the name of the card over the top of another card in sharpie. Some of them even had a real copy of a card (bricked up in some two inch thick display case), but others would just be - like - “This is a card I wish I had” and we’d have fun playing because it’s fun to be across the table from someone with Power Nine tech.
Last time I was active was 10 years ago just as EDH was taking off. Buying the expensive early cards necessitated quite a lot of knowledge and a decent jewelers loupe. I can just imagine how hard it is today with the counterfeiters getting better.
Ah, my mistake. They didn’t even do collector numbers until Exodus. God damn, that’s crazy in hindsight. Makes counterfeiting almost trivial.
We regularly planed the face off cards - like forests - and glued on a colour copy of a pricey card in its place.
But since we were good people, and even though the fakes would fool a kid or a noob, and even shuffle and cut the same, we intentionally sprinkled the copier with yellow confetti so each fake would have some obvious yellow dots.
And we’d ensure everyone knew: “these 6 cards are proxies for these other 6 cards, and in an ante game you win the real card with the proxy. Fair?” It was usually cool.
Our white-hat counterfeiting game was on point. And card sleeves were lame. ;-)
I mean, I played with people who would just scrawl the name of the card over the top of another card in sharpie. Some of them even had a real copy of a card (bricked up in some two inch thick display case), but others would just be - like - “This is a card I wish I had” and we’d have fun playing because it’s fun to be across the table from someone with Power Nine tech.
Last time I was active was 10 years ago just as EDH was taking off. Buying the expensive early cards necessitated quite a lot of knowledge and a decent jewelers loupe. I can just imagine how hard it is today with the counterfeiters getting better.