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Poker Rolling Tips
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Poker Rolling Tips

Rolling papers

€ 1,50
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A booklet of 52 poker rolling tips — each one a miniature playing card from a full deck, sized 50 x 30 mm for a wide, sturdy roach. Deal a hand, pick your card, roll your spliff. The best conversation starter in your rolling kit, and a genuinely practical filter tip once the novelty wears off.
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Poker Rolling Tips — A Full Deck of Card-Shaped Filter Tips

Poker Rolling Tips is a booklet of 52 perforated filter tips, each one printed as a miniature playing card from a standard poker deck. Sized at 50 x 30 mm, they roll into sturdy, well-shaped roaches that hold their form from first puff to last. Part novelty, part genuinely useful smoking accessory — and honestly, the card designs make it almost impossible not to deal out a quick hand before you get round to actually rolling.

52 tips per booklet Full poker deck design Tip size: 50 x 30 mm Perforated for easy tear
SpecValue
Tips per booklet52 (full deck)
Tip dimensions50 x 30 mm
MaterialUnbleached card stock
DesignStandard poker deck — 4 suits, 13 ranks
SKUHS0477

Complete your setup with a pack of king-size rolling papers and a rolling tray. A decent tray keeps your herbs, papers, and tips in one spot — no more chasing loose bits across the table mid-roll.

Why These Poker Rolling Tips Beat Generic Roach Card

Most roach books are forgettable. A plain rectangle of card, you tear one off, fold it up, job done. Nothing wrong with that — we sell plenty of them. But the Poker Rolling Tips booklet does the same job with a bit more personality. Each of the 52 tips carries a different playing card face, printed cleanly enough that you can actually tell your ace of spades from your king of hearts before you roll it into a cylinder.

The 50 x 30 mm size is slightly wider than your standard slim tip, which gives you a chunkier roach. That extra width means better airflow and a sturdier mouthpiece that won't collapse when you pinch it. If you're used to the narrow 20 mm tips that come free in some paper packs, you'll notice the difference straight away — the smoke draws cooler and the tip doesn't go soggy as fast.

The one honest limitation: these are novelty tips at heart. The card printing looks great, but once you've rolled the tip into a spiral, nobody's going to see the design. The fun is in the ritual — picking your card, maybe losing a hand of mini-poker to your mate, then rolling up. If you want plain, no-fuss tips in bulk, a standard roach book will do the job for less. But if you want something that makes the rolling process a bit more entertaining, this is the one we'd grab off the shelf.

How to Roll with Poker Rolling Tips

  1. Tear a single card-tip from the perforated booklet along the scored edge. No scissors needed — they separate cleanly.
  2. Fold the short end of the tip into a small "W" or "M" shape (about 3–4 accordion folds). This creates the inner structure that stops herb from pulling through.
  3. Roll the remaining length of card tightly around the folded section until you have a neat cylinder roughly 7–8 mm in diameter.
  4. Place the rolled tip at one end of your rolling paper, add your herb, and roll as normal. The 50 mm width gives enough card to wrap around itself twice, so the roach holds its shape without unravelling.
  5. Lick, seal, and light. The wider 30 mm height means the tip sits flush with king-size papers — no awkward overhang.

From Our Counter

We've stocked these for a while now, and the thing that sells them isn't the rolling quality — it's the reaction when someone pulls the booklet out at a session. People always want to play a quick round before rolling. We've seen customers buy three booklets at once: one to use, one to keep as a collector's item, and one as a gift. At this price point, it's basically a stocking filler that actually gets used.

One thing we've noticed: the card stock is firm enough to hold a tight roll but not so thick that it affects the burn. Some cheap novelty tips use glossy coated card that tastes off when it heats up — these don't have that problem. The print is on uncoated stock, so you get clean-tasting smoke right down to the roach. Compared to RAW's pre-rolled tips, these require a bit more hands-on rolling, but the 50 x 30 mm format gives you more control over how tight or loose you want the filter.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many tips are in the Poker Rolling Tips booklet?

52 — one for every card in a standard poker deck. No jokers, so you get exactly the same count as a real playing card set.

What size are the poker rolling tips?

Each tip measures 50 x 30 mm. That's wider and taller than most slim filter tips, giving you a chunkier roach with better airflow.

Do the poker rolling tips fit king-size papers?

Yes. The 30 mm height matches king-size papers almost exactly. They also work with standard-width papers — you'll just have a slightly wider tip relative to the joint.

Can you actually play poker with these tips?

Technically, yes. Each tip is a unique card from a full 52-card deck, so you can deal a proper hand. They're small — 50 x 30 mm — but perfectly readable. We've seen it happen more than once behind the counter.

Are the poker rolling tips printed with safe ink?

The tips use soy-based ink on uncoated card stock. There's no glossy coating or chemical finish, so the tip doesn't produce an off taste when it heats up near the lit end.

What is the best rolling tip size for a spliff?

A 50 x 30 mm tip like these poker tips is a solid all-rounder. It gives enough card to wrap twice for a firm cylinder without being so bulky that it dominates the joint. For thinner rolls, fold less of the accordion; for fatter ones, use the full width.

Last updated: April 2026

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