Topic: Condition options suggestion
The current options for marking card conditions are:
Mint
Near-Mint
Good (Lightly Played)
Played
Heavily Played
Poor
I think this is wrong. There's a big difference between "near-mint" and "lightly played." A near-mint card is "so close to mint as to be nearly indistinguishable from it." Basically, if you can actually tell (without a magnifying lens) that a card is not "mint," then it's not "near-mint" either. That's what "so close as to be nearly indistinguishable" means. Further, a truly "mint" card is so pristine that there's absolutely nothing wrong with it, under the highest scrutiny, even when you do put it under that lens. Most of us have probably never even seen a truly "mint" card, and what we call "mint" is usually actually "near-mint." For this reason, most other condition guides that I've seen lump these two together into one single "NM/M" category.
Now, the next step down from "so close to mint as to be nearly indistinguishable from it," at least here, is "light, but obvious play-wear." There's a whole spectrum of conditions that could fall into this category, from the tiniest nick on the edge of an otherwise-NM card, to unsleeved shuffle wear from a 6-round sealed deck event. If someone says they have a card in "LP" condition, you don't know what you're gonna get.
The other day I traded a "LP" Sensei's Divining Top for a "LP" Mutavault. I suppose I shouldn't be surprised, but I was pretty disappointed when the card I received was in far worse condition than the one I sent. But there was no way for me to indicate that my card was "not quite mint, but really still in very nice condition" nor him to say that his was "not quite beat to hell, but getting there."
I guess I should just call my barely-dinged-up cards NM, that's what everyone else seems to do. But it doesn't feel right to me, knowing that near mint is supposed to be damn-near actual mint condition. But SP (or LP) is so much worse than not-quite-NM. I guess in the end it all just boils down to a matter of semantics, but my suggestion is simply to rename the current conditions as such: "Mint" should be renamed "Near-Mint/Mint" (after all, these two are supposed to be nearly indistinguishable from each other, right?) and the current "Near Mint" should be renamed "Excellent" to cover the not-quite-mint, but mostly-undamaged and not-obviously-played cards in between "Near Mint" and "Lightly Played." You wouldn't even really need to convert people's collections to the new system, as most people seem to be calling these "Near Mint" already, anyway. Just rename them, and they can mean what they say.