Yes all current decks from USPCC, and for the last year, have been nearly identical.
They offer: Bicycle and Bee stock, magic and air cushion finishes, smooth or dimpled surfaces.
That's it and anyone that says otherwise is lying.
Cincinnati Tally-Ho's are godly. I have one sealed pack left that I refuse to open.
You left out that recycled stock with the starch finish and veggie-based inks...
I'm honestly not sure if you're serious or not.
Eco deck?
Oops! That's right.
They handled really nice, considering what they're made of.
I believe S&M v5 had recycled stock and they handled exceptionally.
Really? I didn't know that.
Decks made of recycled/organic materials include the Eco Deck and the Archangels. There's been a few more as well.
Smoke and Mirrors v5 was not made of these materials. Like all decks, they were made of paper that's partially made of recycled content. D&D use what's been officially described on their site as an exclusive paper and finish. I suppose if you can only get it from USPC, it's exclusive, right?
The decks I mentioned specifically use 100% post-consumer-content recycled paper (paper that someone actually used and disposed of for recycling, as opposed to all the leftover unsold newspapers from a newspaper company or something to that effect), inks made with vegetable-based dyes and starch-based finish.
So can the difference be due to how much finish is applied or how many times it's applied? Just a random thought. Cus there are still some decks that come out of the Erlanger plant that feels different.
There's a lot of different variables that come into play with the manufacture of a deck of cards, some of which the company makes no effort to control because of how prohibitively expensive it would be. I've never seen decks get finish applied more than once.
I wrote about this in the "Fact of Fiction" topic in-depth. The only info I could add would be that Lee Asher informed me that the amount of pressure used when creating the "paper sandwich" that is the pasteboard used for playing cards is one variable. When the stock is made, they take two big, HUGE rolls of paper from the paper mill and load them into a machine. Those layers get pasted together with a glue that's thoroughly mixed with graphite powder - it's the powder that makes the paper opaque, preventing people from seeing the front of the card through the back. In this pasting, the papers are squished together by big steel rollers that have either a flat surface (for smooth decks, including "ivory" ones) or a bumpy surface (for textured decks, such as "air cushion" or "cambric" or "linoid", etc.). The pressure used to push these layers together affect how stiff and firm the stock is.
For the rest, read the topic.
Playing Cards - "Fact or Fiction?" + Links