well, it's a treasure for me!
As far as the historical TdMs (and relatives) go, I'm lucky enough to have the Heron Jacques Vieville, Dusserre Jean Dodal, Camoin Nicolas Conver Bicentenial, Heron Nicolas Conver, Lo Scarabeo Nicolas Conver, Il Meneghello Soprafino, Heron Notstradamus (poor version of the Jean Payen), and Carte Mundi Vandenborre.
But if we are stictly talking about TdMs, then I have only Jean Dodal and Nicolas Conver with which to compare iconography, so this is a lovely addition.
On one hand, the deck is very rough, and many lines seems to be missing. On the other, there are little details here and there that I find interesting.
The wall on the Sun card has extra area on the left and right, and I've seen older decks that indicate that there may have once been towers on some cards in that place.
The Moon has no drops, but has clouds.
The figure on the right of the Tower looks like it might have been possible that he has legs bent over backwards, and is falling like the other figure rather than crawling out from behind the tower.
The man in the Lovers has his right hand not on his belt, but on the woman beside him, so he is actually touching both women.
The Hermit is very different than usual, looking more like the Hermit in the Heri deck on page 318 of Kaplan II, or the Schaer deck on page 338.
The Wheel is interesting too in that the figure on top of the Wheel is 'squatting", like it is sitting on the wheel, with legs wide open pointing in both directions. I've seen this before, but can't remember where. In fact, the whole orientation of the wheel is different than ususal... hard to explain... but it is almost like the wheel itself has been reversed, but the characters haven't.
There are probably many more, these are just some I noticed while writing this.
The deck is just plain interesting to me, but then, I like to sit and compare details on the cards, not something that everyone enjoys.
I'm very glad I picked it up, for for many, I think the cuts will seem too rough, and for some, the details might even disqualify it from being a "True TdM". For me, it's a lovely addition to my TdM collection and I'm thrilled to have another reference for exploring the iconography.
best,
robert