Your MTG proxies should look clean, feel consistent, and shuffle like a real deck. This quick checklist helps you confirm proxy quality / print quality in a few minutes—so you can start playing, and so we can fix anything fast if something’s off.
Do this first (60 seconds)
- Good light: Check under bright, neutral lighting (daylight or a bright lamp).
- Clean hands + flat surface: Oils and textured tables can hide issues.
- Spot-check smart: Don’t inspect 100 cards one-by-one—pull 10–15 cards spread across the stack (top/middle/bottom) and check those carefully.
The premium checklist (5 minutes)
1) Cut & corners
- Corner shape: All corners should have the same radius—no “one corner sharper than the others.”
- Edge quality: Edges should look clean (no big burrs, tabs, or “hanging chads”).
- No overcut/undercut: Artwork shouldn’t look accidentally shaved off on one side, or overly wide on another.
- No corner whitening: A tiny bit can happen from handling, but fresh-out-of-package whitening across multiple cards is a red flag.
2) Centering & border consistency
- Even borders: If your cards have borders, they should be generally even card-to-card.
- Same card matches itself: If you ordered multiples of the same card, those copies should look consistent with each other.
3) Print clarity (the “read it at arm’s length” test)
- Crisp text: Rules text should be sharp, not fuzzy or “hairy.”
- Clean mana symbols & icons: Small symbols should have clear edges, not blobbed or broken.
- No ghosting/double-image: Look for shadows around text or art lines (a sign of misregistration).
4) Color & contrast (the “does it pop?” check)
- Solid blacks: Blacks should look deep, not gray-brown or washed out.
- No banding: Large flat areas (like skies) should be smooth—no horizontal stripes.
- Natural contrast: Highlights shouldn’t look blown out; shadows shouldn’t look muddy.
- Consistency across the order: A slight shift can happen between print runs, but within the same order it should feel uniform.
5) Front-to-back alignment
- Flip test: Flip a few cards over—backs should be centered similarly from card to card.
- Edge reveal: With a small stack, the borders/edges should “line up” reasonably when squared.
6) Surface, scuffs, and rub resistance
- Finish consistency: The surface should feel consistent across cards—no random sticky/glossy patches.
- Scuff check: Look for scratches or rub marks that were already there when you opened the package.
- Light rub test: Gently rub a fingertip across a dark area on one sample card. You shouldn’t see ink lifting or smearing.
7) Thickness, stiffness, and warping
- Uniform feel: Cards should feel consistent in thickness and stiffness across the stack.
- No “potato chip” curl: A tiny bit of curve can happen from temperature/humidity changes, but obvious warping across many cards is not normal.
- No delamination: Look at edges—layers should not be separating.
8) Count & completeness
- Count the order: Make sure your quantity matches what you purchased.
- Spot-check duplicates: If you ordered a list, verify a handful of specific cards are present and correct.
What’s usually normal (and not worth a support ticket)
- Minor centering variation (small, not dramatic)
- Tiny edge micro-texture from cutting (not chunks missing)
- Slight color perception differences under different room lighting (warm bulbs vs daylight)
What’s not normal (contact us)
- Blurry text that makes cards hard to read
- Misregistration/ghosting (double edges/shadows)
- Strong banding or obvious print lines across many cards
- Major miscuts (art chopped off, borders wildly uneven)
- Consistent corner defects across many cards
- Delamination or ink that smears/lifts with light rubbing
- Widespread scuffing out of the package
If something fails the checklist: how to get a fast resolution
To help us fix it quickly, send:
- Order number
- A clear photo of the full card (front + back)
- A close-up of the defect (corners/edges/text)
- One “stack shot” (a small stack of cards, squared up, showing edge/border alignment)
- How many cards are affected (1 card, 10 cards, “most of the order,” etc.)
For the official coverage details and next steps, use our canonical policy pages: Quality Guarantee / Reprints and Returns & Refunds.