I Hate the Omni Deck

I Hate the Omni Deck

What trick do you absolutely hate? We all have at least one. 

For me, it's the Omni deck.

Maybe it's the way that it's presented that makes me hate it.


"Would you be impressed if I could make that deck vanish from your hands?"


Everyone says yes, but instead of the cards being gone, it's swapped places with a cheap plastic brick.

It shouldn't work, but like cheese on literally anything - It does work.

People freak out... In that moment. 


THE STRAIGHT LINE TO METHOD

Have you ever stuck around to talk with spectators after the tricks are done? I have.

While bathing in amazement they can't help speculating on methods together.

"I was holding it. He must have switched it for that plastic block or something."


The method speculation doesn't bother me... Unless they're right. In which case, it's a weak trick.

The problem I have with Omni Deck, aside from the deck not vanishing in the way they expect, is that it's a straight line for a spectator.

"He must have just put that block in my hands."

Busted!


WHY DO I HAVE THIS OPINION ON OMNI DECK?

I don't perform shows anymore. So I have no responsibility to a paying customer.

I also have no expectation to perform when I go out. I can if I want to, but it isn't a guarantee.

This means I can be freer with my pocket management and take only a few items with me.

I ask myself this question when putting a gimmick in my pocket...

"Is the juice worth the squeeze?"

  • Will an index be worth carrying all day when I can do basically the same trick with a top palm?
  • Will an omni deck be worth carrying when I can do a deck vanish from my hands, by throwing it in my pocket?

My goal is to go out and perform the hardest hitting stuff with the least amount of gimmicks.

Although your situation may be different.

IS THERE ANYTHING BETTER IN THE OMNI SPACE?

Of course your situation may be different. You may have gigs - and thus the only reason to wear trousers that day is to hide gimmicks in them.

So you couldn't care less about bulging pockets. It's an occupational hazard.

For you, Omni deck may be a must... So I'd rather just arm you with the best versions out there.

#1. PHANTOM DECK

The first is Phantom Deck by Joshua Jay (we just added it to our worker's essentials category here). What I love about this is that the cards turn transparent, but still keep the form of cards, instead of an unrelated plastic brick.

You make the other cards turn clear, leaving only their card... and this spreadable version (I believe) has far more impact than a traditional omni deck.

  • It still happens in their hand.
  • Their card is still left signed/normal.
  • It's perhaps even easier to bring in/out as a gimmick.

So it's a fantastic improvement if you love the Omni plot.

#2. The Medusa Project 

The second option, that we don't stock at Ellusionist, but still worth picking up, is Perseus Arkomanis' Medusa project.

For me, the hook or story is what sells the magic here. Everyone knows about the Greek Myth of Medusa. Turning people to stone with a look.

As the spectator looks at the deck in their hand, it's now turned to stone.

Again, this is far more interesting than a boring plastic brick. But remember, if they're really freaked out and they drop it, it could break.

I think the stone breaking sells the effect more - but if you're a worker, that can get very costly. So it's worth telling people to hold it tightly.

#3. Just Don't Say "Deck Vanish" 

The third option is to change your presentation and not tell them the deck is going to vanish. Instead you can use the plastic block as misdirection for another effect.

You: "Were you watching closely?"

Them: "YES!"

You: "Did you see me take the deck out of your hand, go through, find your signed card and zip it up in my wallet and place it back in my pocket over here?... No?"

Them: "NO WAY!"

You: "If you missed that, you also must've missed it when I gave the deck back to you - instead of cards I just gave you a block of plastic to see if you were paying attention."

They open their hand. Scream. You reach into your pocket, pull out your card to wallet and reveal their signed card behind the zip.

In this way, the Omni deck isn't the effect. It's the proof that sells the effect.

That's just one quick idea to facilitate my point.  

I like the presentation of 'were you watching closely' instead of, "I'm going to make the deck vanish". Because they'll swear they were watching you the entire time and you've given them a fake method for their brain to chew on later.

However you present it, I think it's more about meeting or exceeding expectations.

If you say the deck is going to vanish and it just turns into a clear block, you didn't meet their high expectations. 



But that's enough from me. I want to hear from you!
What trick do you hate, that other people love? 
Maybe together we can look to improve it. 

Reading next

Is It the Reaction You Want?
The Secret Fluffer Behind Magic Trailers

15 comments

Eric

Eric

I love how Shin Lim incorporated both the phantom deck and the omni deck at the end of his performance . People have said that they know how he did the tricks: but the way he performed his routine by incorporating different tricks into his show is what makes him a great performer.
So in the end, it’s how you use the tricks and incorporate them into your routines that makes a basic trick into a great performance.

Daniel Harmon

Daniel Harmon

While I disagree with you on hating the Omni Deck (I love performing it), I did find your insights very useful and will apply them to my tricks, not just the Omni Deck.
One trick that I hate (kinda) is ITR. It’s not that I hate levitation, I actually love it, it’s that the only way I can effectively use thread is when I use Loops.
I’ve tried several attempts with ITR systems and they never seem to work for me. I think I might need in-person instruction for something like that.

Bruce Gold

Bruce Gold

In “field testing” both the Omni Deck and the Phantom deck are impressive, but the Omni Deck gets a more immediate punchier response, while the Phantom deck is a slow-burn since it takes a moment to display all the cards as transparent, except the selected one.

Geoff Williams

Geoff Williams

All of this is a moot point. If the spectators freak out and say “How in the %@&$ did you do that?!” it’s fine. If they look puzzled and say, “So you switched it? I didn’t see you do that. You’re good” it’s not magic (you just gave them a theoretically plausible explanation which takes the magic away).

The reaction of the spectators is the only thing that matters.

Casual Distraction

Casual Distraction

Well…that’s a take. I like having an Omni Deck as my second deck in my pocket. I do a few tricks with a normal deck, then switch the deck out. I have 2 spectators each sign a card, put them “hidden” in the deck. They put both hands on the deck (top and bottom), i pull out their signed cards with my eyes closed. Then they open their hands and are shocked. They take the signed card from me and check if I got it right as they return the Omni Deck, I do another switch to the original deck when they ask to see the deck.

As far as tricks I do not like go, i don’t perform certain tricks as I don’t enjoy them or have no passion to perform them. Keymaster and Ambitious Card are a few that come to mind.

Leave a comment

All comments are moderated before being published.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.