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Your cart is empty."Clear front & Purple back. Metallic luxury in the palm of you hand. Opaque. Matte sleeves are our popular line of textured Dragon Shield with superior handling. A perfect mix of durability and shuffle-ability. The professor's #1 pick for card sleeves. The sturdy cardboard box fits 75+ single sleeved cards or 65+ double sleeved cards. Every box has a label at the top of the box for personalization. PVC-free polypropylene sleeves, no acid. Archival safe. Matte 120 μm quality thickness. For cards measuring up to 63x88 mm's (2½""x3½"")."
Evangiline Melanson
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2025
I love this company. They always make very lovely products. These are exactly as described, and my cards fit perfectly.
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
I always love these sleeves so much they fit my Magic cards perfectly every time best sleeves ever would recommend
Justin K.
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2025
The Dragon Shield Matte Purple sleeves are fantastic! They feel really durable and provide a great grip when shuffling. The matte finish helps reduce glare, and the color is vibrant and looks awesome in person. Perfect for protecting your cards during intense gameplay. Highly recommend!
Kyle Kendzierski
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2025
These sleeves do not fit double sleeved cards but are a perfect fit for unserved. They shuffle well and have a slim profile that creates a compact deck only slightly bigger than unserved. Also, the color is great
Kody Clarke
Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2024
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Umar Khan
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2024
This is my first time buying Dragon Shield sleeves and let me just say that the quality of these sleeves is Fantastic! They fit my One Piece Card Game Cards PERFECTLY! I will definitely be ordering more from the Dragon Shield brand again, what’s nice too is once the box that the sleeves came in is empty, it literally turns into a Deck Box as well, overall fantastic quality product.
daculsi lionel
Reviewed in France on November 18, 2024
Produit officiel et conforme à la description
Niall
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 18, 2024
Dragon Shield have become my go-to sleeve company. Consistent Quality.
Rafael Rincón
Reviewed in Mexico on May 5, 2023
El color la textura uff, son de lo mejor lo valen.
Higo Wesley Brandão da Silva
Reviewed in Brazil on February 15, 2023
Produto de excelente qualidade, o que já era de esperar de Dragon Shield.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on November 6, 2023
Love these sleeves. Got them for a MTG commander deck and I happened to even get a few extras in the box. Great colour and really nice feel for shuffling!
Nate
Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2022
Love the feeling and look of these cards. My set contained 101 sleeves. Two were a different size than the rest, one being a few millimeters thinner and the other being a few millimeters wider. The small one did not fit any standard mtg cards so I could not use it, but the larger one was perfect for my commander. Overall, i had 100 usable sleeves, with one wider than the rest.
Steve Mont
Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2017
Recently bought these sleeves for double sleeving my modern mtg deck but had heard a few things about dragon shields being frustrating and difficult to sleeve doubley (is that a word?), and I wanted to address some of those complaints given my experience with these, because I've found a few work-arounds and noticed some things that I wish I knew going into the sleeving process that make it super do-able and can help you enjoy the best sleeves on the market as well as the added security of double sleeving. Here are some hacks that I worked out in my sleeving process.... (using KMC Perfect Size for the inner sleeves)1. Use a hard surface to press the sleeved card into the second sleeve - so the most common issue I had was when pushing the sleeved card into the second sleeve, my pressing would force the card to slide out of the inner sleeve and into the bottom part of the second sleeve without being covered anymore. So at the top of the final double sleeved card now there would be a floppy, empty inner sleeve that you couldn't force into the Dragon Shield sleeve because it wasn't holding a solid card anymore. On way to fix this was to flip the card over when it was half way through the second sleeve and use a table or something to push it evenly through the second sleeve. This is way harder to describe in type than it is to show, but if you figure this out it will make life a little easier for sleeving.2. KMC inner sleeves are NOT that consistent - This was a massive revelation for me, if you have a particular card that is being super stubborn and keeps sliding out of the inner sleeve as you push it through the Dragon Shield, try using a different KMC inner sleeve. It's crazy how often this was the problem. In my testing the inconsistency was never once on the Dragon Shield side, but always always on KMC. I would say just buy extra inner sleeves so you can cull out all the janky oversized ones you find and maybe save those for cards you need to ship or decide to sleeve with more generous outer sleeves. I saved mine for Ultra Pro Eclipse, which are way easier to double sleeve but I don't like as much as Dragons.3. You can stretch the sleeves a little... kinda - I'm sure this isn't recommended by Dragon Shield or by super fastidious players who probably want an absolutely ideal seal on their sleeved cards, but I found that if you have an inner sleeve that absolutely WILL NOT go into an outer sleeve (to repeat I am positive the issue here is the KMC being randomly a little bigger than average and not Dragon Shield being smaller) I found that putting 2 or 3 unsleeved cards into the sleeve and pushing them all the way to the bottom, then taking them out, sufficiently stretches the Dragon Shield enough to slide a sleeved single card in later. I would work out a system where I would stuff 5 Dragon Shields with 3 basic lands and set them aside while I put inner sleeves on a few cards, then after a minute or two I took out the lands and then my sleeved cards would slide in much easier. Not so easy that I felt like I completely deformed the Dragon Shield sleeve, but about on par with an inner/outer sleeve pairing that happened to be randomly smooth and easy, because along the way you'll run into a lot of those as well.4. Sleeve as best you can, get air out, then sleeve again later - if you have a card/inner/outer sleeve combo that's just being super difficult and don't want to stuff the sleeve to stretch it, another way to stretch is to just double sleeve as best as you can, even if there is a little wind sock of inner sleeve still poking out of the top, and then smoosh the cards under a stack of books to force out the air for a few hours, then unsleeve and resleeve them again. Pushing the air out I find not only flattens the sleeved cards, but also makes the inner/outer sleeves a little more agreeable with one another. I put books on my fiished sleeves anyway to get that extra air out anyway, it makes the deck way smaller, flatter and less likely to tip over when stacked as a library.As a product review, I prefer Dragon Shield because they come in sets of 100 and have a really high quality relative to other brands I've used. It doesn't hurt that they also come in more interesting colors than other brands, and these new purple ones are pretty striking. They have an almost metallic sheen to them on the back, but still textured and nice. I really like them with a black deck personally. But again, hearing about the double sleeving issue was almost a deal-breaker for me because my preference is to always double up to protect from potential water damage, and if these sleeves were incompatible with that they would be useless to me.
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