I loved what I read about this new method, and decided to give this method a shot at my most recent SCG IQ.
Deck checks were performed at beginning of round and mid-round, by an experienced L2 judge, an L1 who was comfortable with beginning of round checks but not mid round checks, and an L0 who had never done a deck check of either kind. I was interested to see how someone new to mid round checks, and someone new to deck checks entirely, would perform.
Here's the data, from deck-and-deck list-in-hand time to “looks good” time:
Old method
Average time 5:02
Minimum time 3:39
Maximum time 6:03
Average time extension 9 minutes (time to and from tables added about a minute, plus the standard 3 minutes for shuffling)
New method
Average time 5:10
Minimum time 4:17
Maximum time 6:30
Average time extension 6 minutes (adding about a minute for travel to and from the tables)
Observations:
For our first time doing the new checks, the checks themselves weren't really any faster or slower (8 seconds difference on average is hardly significant). But, the savings in the extra 3 minutes were enormous, especially at end of round. Waiting 6 minutes past the buzzer rather than 9 minutes past the buzzer for time extensions may not seem tremendous, but it really is a third faster and it seemed to keep the momentum going between rounds.
The new method really Shined for mid round checks, though! Both of my floor judges struggled with keeping sideboards separately organized during mid round checks using the old method (it really takes practice!), but using the new method seemed very intuitive, even with a sideboarded deck, and both floor judges preferred it then. As an experienced deck checker, I felt the new method was a vast improvement for mid round checks, and I also immediately preferred it.
The new method requires much less space to perform, which is a plus in tight venues.
The new method really requires a bit of ambidexterity. One judge was very right hand dominant, and used his right hand to flip cards and to write. It slowed him down noticeably. Use both hands :)
It was not a big deal telling players “We've used a new deck check method that does not require reshuffling because it maintains the order of your deck. Just present your deck to your opponent as usual and play on!” Players liked not having to shuffle again!
Conclusion:
There were no downsides to using the new method, but there were many upsides. I will continue practicing the new method, and expect to become even faster with practice. Give it a try at your next event!
Edited John Trout (Nov. 10, 2015 10:07:23 PM)