Interesting indeed.. but the price is rather expensive for MPC deck..
It's a little costly, but considering prices these days, they're not the worst. MPC is better, especially for artistic decks, than it used to be, and the per-deck cost decreases when you buy more, so it's not a bad deal.
I'm going to ask a crazy question, because I'm still new to playing card collecting. What's the deal with MPC cards? Everyone seems to dislike them.
The question is far from crazy. They used to have issues with color reproduction and stock quality. The stock has improved, the printing has become more accurate. They're popular for prototyping because you can make a print run of a single deck for a pittance compared to USPC, which charges in the mid-three figures. But the biggest remaining issue is actually the result of what the company must have thought at the time was an upgrade. They switched from using die-cutting to punch their cards out to using a laser cutter. Sounds all cool and high-tech, but die-cutting creates a beveled edge that allows for weave and faro shuffling. Their laser creates a straight-cut edge, perfectly flat, making such shuffles impossible. In theory, it should be possible to use the laser to cut at an angle, but I honestly couldn't say how difficult that would be, beyond "harder than just doing the default."