No, this is not the name of a team-sports-related deck. And it's not being used as an adjective either. This is really the name of the deck. The basic premise of this deck is to provide simple (an understatement!) pictures with cheat sheets of the meanings of the cards actually printed right on each card.
I understand that the intention here is good enough, the idea is to give the beginner hints about the meanings of each card so as to facilitate the learning process. However, I really do believe all it accomplishes is to promote laziness.
If you don't have to look up the answer, or memorize it, or learn how to "see" it in the symbolism of the pictures, you aren't learning how to read tarot at all. You are learning to cheat. I personally know someone who reads with this deck, has used it for as long as they have been reading cards. They are now employed for one of those 1-900-Tarot lines. Tells you how good those are.
The artwork in this deck so strongly resembles the third-grade art contests that you see run by supermarkets every year and pasted up all over their windows, that I can't take this deck seriously. Size-wise, it is a normal deck. The suits are Swords, Wands, Cups and Coins. There is nothing offensive in this deck, no questionable graphics or nudity.
Another problem with using a deck with these cheats on them is this, if you are reading for a client in person, and you wish to explain to the client what the card really means, especially in context of the position it has come up in, and the client sees the cheat right on the card, well, at the best it undermines your credibility, and at the worst it can cause an argument if the client feels you are telling him different from what the card reads.
All in all, I cannot recommend this deck to anyone except maybe your third-grade children who want to play with their very own tarot deck. What's next, Barbie Tarot?
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by George R. Bennett:
Gong
Hee Fot Choy Playing Cards
Review Copyright 1998 by Gina M. Pace