I really don't think enough remains as this image shows all the cards we have. This deck is from Limogne, a city located in the South-West of France near, but not extremely so, to the Spanish border. This follows the Spanish layout of having a King on foot, a mounted Knight, and a Knave on foot as can be seen in the complete court of swords. The straight swords (instead of curved swords) and the style of cup and the rough club rather than a smooth baton mark this deck as being Spanish style. The seated king and queen on the far left of the image do not meet any of the criteria for a regular deck of playing cards. They are probably trumps. However, it is not uncommon for printers to print multiple decks on single sheets so we can't rule out the idea that the seated king and queen are part of a separate deck. The lack of a discernible suit for the queen argues against this in this case, I believe. But note the imperial double eagle on the chest of the seated king and consider that we have other instances of cards with what appears to be a fifth suit or, possibly, a trump suit that feature this double eagle.
The Rothschild Collection at the Louvre contains a 15th Century Germano-Italian deck that shares many similarities with this deck.
Note the suits of coins, cups, staves (a pilgrim staff in this case), and swords. Note that it uses a Swiss/German court layout (King, Over, Under). Note also the fifth suit of shields (a very common suit in German/Swiss decks) with the eagle.
Again, this might be a case of printing multiple decks to make greatest use of a sheet of paper. But it might also be the case that we're seeing some early trumps.