Damokles Opulentia Playing Cards by Giovanni Meroni/Thirdway Industries

$55.00

  • Luxury italian Velvet tuck box, crafted and foiled in Italy by Boschiero&Newton
  • Around 800 units made, made mainly for Kickstarter Backers
  • Fully custom but with recognizable courts, perfect to play with
  • 2 Metallic inks on card backs (gold and silver)
  • 3 Metallic inks on card faces (gold, silver, azure)
  • Printed by USPCC with Bicycle stock
  • 4 Intricate Jokers inspired by the Four Horsemen

In stock

We ship all our decks in one of our free plastic deck protectors for their safety and your peace of mind!
All orders of 4, 6 or 10 decks will be shipped in one one of our storage gift boxes for free!

Have a collection you’d like to sell? X-decks is interested!

Description

“Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.”

Damokles is a series about the imminent and ever-present peril faced by all human beings, inspired by the popular Greek myth of Damocles.

The 12 court cards of Damokles represent the Kings and Queens of the World, blessed with the Crown, but also exposed to the threat of the Sword. Each suit represents a different threat:

  • ♥️ Hearts are threats caused by human emotions (K is “Sacrifice”, Q is “Vengeance” J is “Defiance”)
  • ♦️ Diamonds are threats caused by human hunger (K is “Greed”, Q is “Dominance”, J is “Indolence”)
  • ♣️ Clubs are threats caused by the material environment around us (K is “World”, Q is “Nature”,  J is “Health”)
  • ♠️ Spades are threats caused by spiritual or immaterial things (K is “Time”, Q is “Magic”,  J is “Chaos”)

The red cards (Hearts, Diamonds) bring the threat on themselves with their actions; in contrast, the black cards (Clubs, Spades) suffer the threat passively, often trying to prevent it.

The Jokers are the incarnation of the four threats: Time/Death (Spades), World/Conquest (Clubs), Strength/War (Hearts) and Desire/Famine (Diamonds). These are obviously inspired by the four Horsemen.

In Adamas/Opulentia the blade is silvery and shiny, to represent a time when nature is young and unspoiled, and the Word enjoys a fragile peace. There is plenty of everything – although not everyone receives of the bounty. The danger is there, but the thread that holds the Sword is new and strong.

In Cuprum/Ruinae the blade is old and rusty, the World has been conquered, revealing the true face of war. Insatiable hunger consumes almost everything, and the Reaper is sharpening his scythe. How much longer can the old thread keep the Sword from falling?

In a way, these decks represent “past” (Adamas/Opulentia) and “future” (Cuprum/Ruinae) – however, I see the World as a cycle, so there is no reason to assume that the blade will not turn shiny again, even after having been rusty for a long time.

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