This particular paper is good for the money, it is High Glossy double-sided at 160g. Relatively thin but it doesn't lose its performance because it has a coating.
Since it is High Gloss, the coating absorbs the ink well and dries relatively quickly, and the paper underneath doesn't get soaked at all, so the thickness of the sheet is not a problem. I would like to have an option for 200 or 250 double-sided in high gloss of course, but unfortunately, there is no such paper on skroutz (I found another brand from a foreign site, very expensive).
Note that the grams of the papers do not directly refer to the thickness; a glossy paper is thinner than a matte one at the same grams because the coating makes it heavier. Therefore, it is quite thin, and I mention this because many printers that do not have a rear paper tray struggle to take thick papers. This is quite thin like 140 grams in plain paper.
I got it for just under 5 euros for 50 sheets, which is essentially less than 10 cents per sheet, totally value for money for what it offers. The equivalent from Epson is I think 30 cents per sheet and is matte and not glossy like this one.
I don’t think it’s for printing photos for archival purposes obviously, but I got it to make double-sided greeting cards or to print educational images and drawings that I make for my nieces and nephews, I bind them with a metal spiral so they have them like books and they are of very good quality.
Note: my printer is the Epson EcoTank L850, an amazing printer with 6 inks that is made for photographic quality so the prints are better compared to those of regular printers.
I have bought 4 from Mediarange and so far I am satisfied (I will do reviews for the rest).
I am attaching some indicative images I found on my phone, they were for testing images and cards that I fold in half, the photos do not show how good they look in reality but when I showed them to some, they thought they were ready-made from the store because the quality is very good for home printing.