Okay guys, buckle up because I almost got totally burned buying tarot cards last week. Yep, the Weaver Tarot thing was hyped everywhere, and I almost clicked “buy” without digging deeper. Here’s exactly what went down in my research rabbit hole.
Spotting Those Flashy Ads Everywhere
First off, I kept seeing Weaver Tarot popping up. Fancy Instagram pics, influencers doing dramatic spreads, all that jazz. Looked gorgeous! I figured, “Hey, maybe it’s time to upgrade my old deck.” Almost added it to cart right then – so glad I didn’t.
My Deep-Dive into Review Chaos
Next morning, I brewed some coffee and got serious. Started typing “Weaver Tarot reviews” everywhere:
- Scrolled through like 20 pages of forum threads. People arguing whether the card stock felt “premium” or “like cereal box material.” No agreement at all.
- Checked video reviews. Saw one guy literally struggling to shuffle because the cards kept sticking together. Cringe.
- Dug into reddit rants. Someone posted close-ups of their deck after two weeks – corners fraying like crazy. Another person complained the ink smelled like chemicals. Ugh.
Sorting Real Talk from Hype
Here’s the messy truth I pieced together:
- Artwork? Stunning. No debate there. Colors pop, symbolism’s rich. But pretty pictures don’t matter if…
- Quality control’s a total gamble. Half the reviews mentioned dents, scratches, or misprints right out the box. Others got perfect decks. Pure luck.
- Cardstock feels cheap to most hands. Multiple people compared it to dollar-store playing cards. Flimsy, hard to handle. One reviewer said it bent permanently after one riffle shuffle. Yikes.
I even messaged three random reviewers who posted negative stuff. Two replied saying customer service ghosted them about replacements. Big red flag!
My Final Call (And Sad Coffee)
Sitting there with cold coffee, I realized: nope. Not risking $50 on a “maybe good, maybe crap” deck. The art’s beautiful but the physical product sounds inconsistent as hell. Saved my cash and felt kinda proud dodging that bullet.
Bottom line? Don’t trust the ads. Dig deep, read the angry reviews twice, and if too many mention “flimsy” or “arrived damaged,” run. I’m sticking with my battered old deck for now!