Most game stores have carried the Max Protection line and
most gamers are familiar with the line, although often not in a positive way,
as Max Protection had some serious production issues years ago and the memory
of those problems still lingers in long time players’ minds. However, I had noticed the quality of Max Protection
sleeves improving markedly in the past
few years, so when I ran into Glenn Goddard, who I had not seen since his years
with Wargames West and now works for Max Protection, at September’s Alliance
Open House, I asked him about the previous perception of the product line and
to compare it with the company’s products now. Goddard not only kindly provided
with a comparison between the two but also a brief history of the company as
well.
Max Protection’s roots are in a company named PKK, founded
in 1989 by Patrick Kwan Sr. and Jr. Both Kwans were avid sports fans and collectors
and launched PKK to satisfy what they saw as an underserved niche in the collectables
market. When Magic, and later Pokemon, hit the market, PKK branched out to
provide protection supplies to those collectors, introducing, according to
Goddard, the first “penny sleeves”, the first deck box and the first colored
sleeves. In 1999, a competing company bought out PKK but, when the buying
company later went bankrupt a few years later, PKK returned to the Kwan’s
control. Deciding to continue the company’s direction but under a new name, it
relaunched as Max Protection in 2003 and quickly found renewed success with its
image sleeves, the first company to release sleeves with pictures on the back
of the sleeve, rather than a clear or solid color back.
Unfortunately, the release of “holo-foil” image sleeves in
2004 provided what Goddard calls a “Domino’s moment” for the company as the new
sleeves, while impressive to look at, proved less durable for regular play and
the images has serious peeling problems, coming off the sleeves after only a
few games. Though players loved the idea of the images, Max Protection
developed a reputation for poor quality, especially among tournament players,
that persists to this day. Players abandoned the company’s products in droves,
opting instead for image back sleeves from other companies that had entered the
market. As Max Protection found out, once you lose a reputation, it can take
years to recover it. That is just what the company has worked on for much of
the past decade.
Max Protection invested significantly in both product
development and licensing, developing their higher quality Shuffle –Tech sleeves
and their Premium Packs combining a hard plastic deck box, 100 Single Colored
Large Sleeves with 100 Perfect Fit sleeves all for the same price 100 sleeves
by other companies in a paper box. In addition the company has secured licenses
for both Bruce Lee and The Princess Bride and had produced sleeves and boxes
featuring both licenses. In addition, the company entered into an agreement
with Alter Reality Games to sponsor their ARG Circuit Series, generating more positive
responses from customers as tournament players used the new sleeves and spoke favorably
of them, resulting in increased market share for MP.
My store cutback severely on MP products after the 2004
problems but have slowly added them back to our product mix over the past
decade. We have found some slight resistance but most players either don’t
remember the problems with the holo-image sleeves or have entered the hobby
since then and know nothing about it. Either way, I am happy to see the company
doing well.
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