Choose Slowplay if you want an established retail poker chip line available today with several clay and ceramic options. Choose Tells Poker Club if you want a first-run 500-chip ceramic set built around 43mm chips, included cards, a dealer button, a case, and a private-home-game design point of view.

What this comparison is based on

This is a public-research comparison. We did not buy, weigh, shuffle, stack, or long-term test Slowplay chips side by side with Tells chips. Slowplay claims come from official Slowplay product and collection pages checked on June 26, 2026. Tells claims come from the Tells Poker Club product page and internal product marketing context for the presale set.

That means the strongest claims here are configuration claims: set size, material options, chip dimensions, published chip breakdowns, sample-set availability, and included accessories. Table feel, finish durability, sound, and long-term case wear should be treated as open questions until buyers handle samples or finished production sets.

Quick verdict

Slowplay is the safer fit for buyers who want to compare a mature retail catalog and buy a finished product immediately. Its official store lists Godel and Nash poker chip sets, clay and ceramic choices, individual chip add-ons, plaques, mats, and sample sets.

Tells Poker Club is the cleaner fit for buyers who specifically want a complete 500-chip ceramic set for private poker nights and like the idea of joining a first-run presale. The tradeoff is timing: Tells is a presale product, while Slowplay has already published a broader live catalog.

Tells Poker Club vs Slowplay at a glance

Best fit Slowplay fits buyers who want established retail choices now. Tells fits buyers who want a first-run, brand-forward ceramic set for private home games.
Material focus Slowplay lists clay and ceramic options. Tells is focused on premium ceramic poker chips.
Chip size Slowplay Nash ceramic pages list 39mm and 43mm variations. Tells is planned around 43mm ceramic chips.
Set format Slowplay publishes 300- and 500-chip options for several sets. Tells is centered on a complete 500-chip format.
Accessories Slowplay set pages describe cases, cards, and dealer buttons depending on the line. Tells includes two boxes of cards, a dealer button, and a case.
Buying stage Slowplay is a retail catalog. Tells is a presale and first-run product.

Where Slowplay looks stronger

  • Retail availability. Slowplay is useful when you want to buy from an established shop today rather than wait for a presale production run.
  • Catalog breadth. Its official poker chip collection lists multiple set lines, clay and ceramic choices, individual chip add-ons, plaques, and sample sets.
  • Published configuration detail. Slowplay's Nash ceramic set page publishes 300- and 500-chip numbered and blank breakdowns, plus 39mm/10g and 43mm/12g ceramic size variations.
  • Sample buying path. Slowplay lists Nash and Godel sample sets, which is useful for buyers who want to handle materials before committing.

Where Tells Poker Club is the closer fit

Tells makes more sense if you are not trying to choose between a large catalog. The first product is intentionally narrow: a 500-chip ceramic set with 43mm chips, two boxes of poker cards, a dealer button, and a case for private home games.

That focus matters for hosts who want the set to feel like a complete table object rather than a generic casino imitation. Tells is positioned around private poker nights, poker clubs, and repeat home games where the design language is part of the experience.

How to choose between them

Buy Slowplay if... You want a known retail product, want to compare clay against ceramic, need sample sets, or prefer choosing between several visual lines and chip formats.
Consider Tells if... You want a 500-chip ceramic set for home games, care about 43mm chips, want cards/button/case included, and are comfortable with presale timing.
Pause if... You need proven long-term handling data, verified production reviews, or exact final denomination counts before buying. Wait for samples, updated product pages, or finished-run reviews.

Set size and denomination planning

For recurring home games, a 500-chip set is often easier to live with than a 300-chip set because it gives the bank more room for rebuys, deeper starting stacks, and six-to-ten-player nights. Slowplay's Nash ceramic page says its 300-chip set meets seven-to-eight-player needs and the 500-chip set meets nine-to-ten-player needs, based on its own published ratio.

The right breakdown still depends on your game. A tournament night can use higher denominations cleanly. A small-stakes cash game needs enough low-value chips to support blinds and early betting without constant making change. Before choosing any set, map the chip bank to the actual stakes your group plays.

Bottom line

Slowplay deserves consideration if you want an established, currently shoppable premium poker chip catalog with multiple material choices and sample options. Tells Poker Club is the more focused alternative if your target is a complete 500-chip ceramic set for private home games and you value a first-run design-led product over a broad retail catalog.

Compare the Tells set before you buy

See the planned 500-chip ceramic format, 43mm chips, included cards, dealer button, case, and private-game positioning behind the first Tells Poker Club run.

Pre-order your set

Sources

Related reading

For more context before choosing, read the Slowplay poker chip set review, the poker chip set buying guide, and the 300 vs 500 poker chip set comparison.