We've covered Nintendo's history a lot here at NL, and not just the video game side. At this point, it's pretty well known that before Nintendo jumped into gaming, it was well known for producing handmade hanafuda playing cards. And if you're a hardcore Nintendo collector, you'll likely want to get your hands on these.
Erik Voskuil is one person who managed to get hold of two packets of these playing cards. As the owner of the Before Mario blog, and author of the book of the same name, he managed to get two 1950s packs that depicted Nintendo's own Kyoto headquarters on the box, and they appeared to be in pretty decent condition. But Voskuil's cards had, unfortunately, met a tragic fate. (Thanks, Kotaku!)
- Further reading - Book Review: Before Mario
Understandably, Voskuil shared his excitement of getting the cards on Twitter, toying with the idea of opening them or leaving them sealed. Eventually, he decided on opening one of them to document the images of Kyoto.
As you can see in the photos, despite the boxes being 70+ years old, they don't look bad! We're pretty envious. But when Voskuil opened the packet, he wasn't greeted by a deck of cards, per se — rather, a block of them.
Because the cards had remained tightly packed together for all of these years, the ink on them had likely warmed up and caused the cards to stick together. Plus, because the cards were made in the '50s, they weren't the plastic-covered kind you get nowadays, meaning they were fragile
Voskuil documents the process and disappointment over on his blog, but here's an extract from his attempt:
"...when I carefully removed part of the wrapper, I quickly discovered that all cards had been completely fused together. They had remained pressed together for such a long time, likely under hot and humid conditions, that the ink on all cards had made them stick together completely. The stack of individual cards had turned into one solid brick. The photo prints on the cards, that contain relatively large amounts of ink, may have contributed to this as well.
It is also good to note that these cards pre-date the 'all plastic' cards. These are made from paper, and more fragile than plastic cards.
After applying some further force to the pack, and trying to bend it, it became clear that there was a real risk of the layers of paper within the card giving way and tearing, rather than the cards coming loose. The other pack had the same problem. It was a solid brick as well."
Despite receiving advice on how to save the cards, Voskuil is sure that the cards are beyond any help. Disappointing! But he at least hopes that he'll find another pack to open in the future. He's still open to suggestions on how to save these fragile paper cards, so if you can think of any, send them over to him on his blog!
We can't imagine the disappointment and frustration, but at least the boxes look nice! And the boxes did come with one loose card each, so that's something.
Have you ever been disappointed by a collector's purchase? Would you like a set of Nintendo's hanafuda playing cards for yourself? Let us know!
[source blog.beforemario.com, via kotaku.com]
Comments 39
The way "(Thanks, Kotaku)" is put in the article makes it sound like it's Kotaku's fault. 😆
Shame the cards fused together. Life sucks sometimes.
That’s one of the risks of never before opened merch. You don’t really know the quality of what you’re getting. I couldn’t imagine spending hundreds or thousands on that kind of gamble.
As someone who had this exact thing happen with old Match Attax cards, this story hits me like a heavyweight boxer's punch. So sorry for Erik!
What were Nintendo thinking? Idiots.
(/s)
Well, what do you know! Nintendo products have been getting bricked since the 1950s!
If I was a collector of this kind of stuff and ended up with a big brick of fused vintage cards like this, I'd think it would make the collector's item more interesting. More interesting in a historical, scientific, AND humourous way.
I certainly wouldn't be so disappointed - I mean, it's not like they were actually planning on playing a game of cards with them.
Wow first joy con drift and now this. Nintendo needs to get its act together...
Someone my brother knew had been saving a very old and expensive bottle of wine for a very special occasion. They finally decided to open it, with my brother present, and everyone sipped their glasses to discover... it tasted absolutely awful! It had unfortunately spoiled and the whole bottle went down the drain. Whoops!
In hindsight should have placed the open deck in a humid room (bathroom with a hot shower on).
Thanks Obama
Oh from the picture I thought this was about Hanafuda cards but they are regular cards. Come on NL what's with your random image choices lately?
Sucks all the same, I would have liked to see pictures of the individual cards.
Still an interesting find.
I'd love to see what a professional conservator of documents could make of these.
However, in the end, does it matter?
Who cares if an NES cartridge in a factory sealed box even still works?
It looses its value if you open it anyway.
It's a Schrödinger's Cat situation.
@EarthboundBenjy I agree. I think one of the most expensive Star Wars action figures ever sold was a Boba Fett that accidentally got two left hands at the factory.
Well at least you’ve got a nice paperweight now!
I work in a place that specializes in old artifacts and manuscripts, and we deal with this sort of thing with books that are 300+ years old. There are special machineries that can help fix his issue, but he needs a proper lab to do that
@Ogbert
A perfect time to pull out the trusty old sad Pikachu face surely!
Suggestion: deli slicer.
Such a shame. I don’t blame him for opening them, though. That’s half the fun and it would’ve been really cool to see what they look like. Wonder if any sets out there survived or if they all ended up like this?
@FatWormBlowsASparky haha! Yeah even that would have been more appropriate than an entirely different pack of cards from a different game and era!
I swear one day we’ll get an article that’s like “Stunning new Pokemon plushies announced” and the thumbnail is a broken Master Chief mega block man in puddle.
@Ogbert STUNNING. LEGENDARY. NINTENDOLIFE.
Guess it was just the hand he was dealt.
Object fetishisation is a ruthless duchess 🤷🏽♂️
And here I thought it was going to be one of those bait-and-switch deals like Logan Paul had a few months ago, where he thought he had some rare Pokémon cards, but turns out someone swapped them out with G.I. Joe cards instead. I figured someone swapped out the real cards for fakes, like Logan Paul's incident, but the actual story was probably just as bad.
But frankly, I know the feeling somewhat. My family likes to buy a particular brand of tortillas for tacos (the Mission brand), but we freeze ours to keep them fresh. They then have a tendency to stick together and tear when we try to separate them. Compare that with my preferred brand of tortillas (Azteca), which separates more easily, even when frozen.
@AstroTheGamosian I've had Mission white corn tortillas sitting in the pantry for what must be upwards of a year before, and still be unblemished and delicious after an obligatory minute of deep-frying in peanut oil, just sayin'.
I can't comment on flour tortillas if that's your preference (you monster), and I wouldn't expect your family to take food storage advice from some rando on a Nintendo news site, but their corn tortillas don't really go stale or moldy like, say, bread does; a few weeks or months at room temp ain't gonna bother them one bit.
@Fath I think the ones we use are also flour tortillas. I know the Azteca ones I prefer are. I'm not much for the corn flavor, unless it's a hard shell or chip.
In fact, I'm very particular about my corn, period. I prefer it off the cob, either fresh or canned (not frozen), and with butter, salt and pepper; no creamed corn, either. And forget cornbread.
But in any case, the Azteca ones HAVE to be refrigerated at least, since they don't contain preservatives. But since we don't have tacos or fajitas often enough, we freeze our tortillas. I also prefer Azteca because it's thinner than Mission. Mission is too thick for me.
I will say, though: Mission makes great chips. I love their chips, but I am not a fan of their tortillas.
@AstroTheGamosian Haha, all fair enough; happy eating .
@Silly_G history repeats itself...
Yoink.... Easy peasy.
@AstroTheGamosian @Fath I’m a Banderita man myself. I could seriously sit here and eat the giant fajita size flour tortillas or the corn tostadas with nothing on them but I only use actual tortillas for special occasions now. I’m old enough and I’ve had a bad enough relationship with food that I have to keep an eye on myself.
These days I mainly use Joseph’s wraps and pitas with my breakfasts and lunches. They’re some weird hippy crap made of flax and oat bran and happy thoughts, so they have a nice balance of protein, carbs, and fiber. They never go bad, they never tear each other, and each unit only has 60 calories.
@GrailUK It is possible they didn't know. A lot of things we now know are dangerous today used to be used all the time.
@ShadowSa s for sarcasm. Of course they didn;t know
Dude was absolutely crazy to open 70 year old sealed product, see that time had taken its toll, not take the hint and then do it again... 😰
@Aerona
Is that a euphemism?
Haha! This made me so happy. I would love to have a pack of these but I'm sure they are expensive as hell. So to see someone who is able to afford something like this end up screwed over and miserable in the end made my day. 😊
@Aerona yup, that's what he gets.
@Flint,
Thanks for that, and it's true most sites will not want tp upset anyone, which is why they lean that way.
And to be honest I disagree a lot on here, but none of it ever personal, it's also nice to find common ground.
THIS reminds me of the ridiculous WATA and VGA graded sealed video game collectors who like to encapsule brand new video game cartridges into acrylic cases ! Some of those games contain Lithium Batteries ! If those batteries aren't changed. There's a good chance those batteries could leak over the cartridge's PCBs causing the game to not function ! But they won't know it as long as the game remains sealed !
Ooof... That sucks, buddy.
@Deady Sorry for the late reply. I came down with you-know-what a few days ago, and only just now had the energy to break out my mouse and keyboard to use my computer.
Everyone has a preference, I guess. I only use pita for gyros, and I'm very particular about my gyros: no veggies or tzatziki sauce, just the meat strips. And I eat the meat first, then use ketchup (preferably Heinz) and dip the pita into that.
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