Compare Poker Night at the Inventory prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Skunkape Games. Published by Telltale Games. Released on 3/5/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Casual.

The Inventory is back open, and the best reason to sit down has nothing to do with poker strategy - it's the four absurd personalities trash-talking across the felt that make this remaster worth your evening.

I'll be honest: I loaded this up expecting to feel the age on it immediately. A 16-year-old casual card game, originally delisted in 2019 when Telltale collapsed, brought back by Skunkape Games with a visual refresh and some AI fixes - the conditions for disappointment were all there. But somewhere between the Heavy calmly describing battlefield carnage and Strong Bad taking personal offense at a well-timed bluff, I stopped caring about the calendar and just played poker. The mechanical pitch is simple. It's No Limit Texas Hold'em, first-person perspective, you against four AI opponents at the same table until one player is left standing. Each tournament starts with a $10,000 buy-in, blinds escalate over time, and losing all your chips just resets you to a fresh game with your running stats intact. What Skunkape has actually improved in this remaster goes deeper than the lighting overhaul: the original game's poker logic was genuinely broken in places, with AI opponents sometimes evaluating only the high card in a hand and triggering illegal re-raise situations. That's all fixed here. The characters now play with distinct, consistent styles - Tycho folds unless he has something real, Max swings erratically on Normal difficulty, the Heavy respects large pots, and Strong Bad bluffs constantly. Each of them also carries readable tells through subtle animations during betting rounds, a mechanic the game never explicitly explains but rewards patient players who pay attention instead of just watching the chips. The banter is the product, full stop. Telltale reportedly wrote more lines of dialogue for this game than a typical Sam and Max adventure episode, and it shows in how rarely the table goes quiet. The four characters - Max from Sam and Max, Strong Bad from Homestar Runner, Tycho from Penny Arcade, and the Heavy from Team Fortress 2 - were written with deliberate relationship dynamics. Tycho dislikes Strong Bad, the Heavy regards Strong Bad as a miniature version of himself, and Max operates in cheerful chaos throughout. The remaster leaves the original dialogue intact, which is both its charm and its one honest weakness: the writing is genuinely witty but it cycles. After several hours the jokes start to repeat, and Strong Bad's flavor of self-aggrandizing humor lands differently in 2026 than it did in 2010. Your mileage on that will depend almost entirely on how much affection you carry for these specific characters. Beyond the poker itself, there is a light unlockable loop. Win tournaments to collect new card decks and table designs, some of which change character costumes or shift the entire visual palette - the Automata table turns everything black and white, while the Videlectrix table drops Strong Bad into a low-polygon retro skin. Characters may also wager personal items as collateral when they run short on chips; knock them out and you claim the item, which on Steam ties directly into Team Fortress 2 as a cosmetic unlock. The Iron Curtain minigun, the Lugermorph pistol, the Dangeresque, Too? shades - these were originally delisted alongside the game in 2019 and are being reissued here. It adds a tangible reason to keep running tournaments beyond pure score-chasing. The single gap worth flagging is that there are no win-probability overlays or hand-strength indicators during a showdown, which anyone coming from modern poker software will miss immediately. This remaster is clearly aimed at two audiences and works differently for each. If you were there in 2010 and watched this disappear from storefronts, it plays exactly as you remember it, just cleaner and mechanically sounder. If you're coming in fresh, how much you get out of it will track almost exactly with how much the cast means to you - but the writing is sharp enough that even partial familiarity with one or two franchises carries you through. Alex, Scout Team

Poker Night at the Inventory

Poker Night at the Inventory

Mar 5, 2026Skunkape GamesTelltale Games
GamerScout Says

The Inventory is back open, and the best reason to sit down has nothing to do with poker strategy - it's the four absurd personalities trash-talking across the felt that make this remaster worth your evening.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €5.19

GamerScout Verdict

Best for players who want a chill poker night with characters they already love - hollow if the cast means nothing to you.

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Price History

Historical low
€5.1926 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€1.04€15.33€29.63€43.925 Jun14 Jun23 Jun2 Jul11 Jul
5 Jun — 11 Jul
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About Poker Night at the Inventory

I'll be honest: I loaded this up expecting to feel the age on it immediately. A 16-year-old casual card game, originally delisted in 2019 when Telltale collapsed, brought back by Skunkape Games with a visual refresh and some AI fixes - the conditions for disappointment were all there. But somewhere between the Heavy calmly describing battlefield carnage and Strong Bad taking personal offense at a well-timed bluff, I stopped caring about the calendar and just played poker. The mechanical pitch is simple. It's No Limit Texas Hold'em, first-person perspective, you against four AI opponents at the same table until one player is left standing. Each tournament starts with a $10,000 buy-in, blinds escalate over time, and losing all your chips just resets you to a fresh game with your running stats intact. What Skunkape has actually improved in this remaster goes deeper than the lighting overhaul: the original game's poker logic was genuinely broken in places, with AI opponents sometimes evaluating only the high card in a hand and triggering illegal re-raise situations. That's all fixed here. The characters now play with distinct, consistent styles - Tycho folds unless he has something real, Max swings erratically on Normal difficulty, the Heavy respects large pots, and Strong Bad bluffs constantly. Each of them also carries readable tells through subtle animations during betting rounds, a mechanic the game never explicitly explains but rewards patient players who pay attention instead of just watching the chips. The banter is the product, full stop. Telltale reportedly wrote more lines of dialogue for this game than a typical Sam and Max adventure episode, and it shows in how rarely the table goes quiet. The four characters - Max from Sam and Max, Strong Bad from Homestar Runner, Tycho from Penny Arcade, and the Heavy from Team Fortress 2 - were written with deliberate relationship dynamics. Tycho dislikes Strong Bad, the Heavy regards Strong Bad as a miniature version of himself, and Max operates in cheerful chaos throughout. The remaster leaves the original dialogue intact, which is both its charm and its one honest weakness: the writing is genuinely witty but it cycles. After several hours the jokes start to repeat, and Strong Bad's flavor of self-aggrandizing humor lands differently in 2026 than it did in 2010. Your mileage on that will depend almost entirely on how much affection you carry for these specific characters. Beyond the poker itself, there is a light unlockable loop. Win tournaments to collect new card decks and table designs, some of which change character costumes or shift the entire visual palette - the Automata table turns everything black and white, while the Videlectrix table drops Strong Bad into a low-polygon retro skin. Characters may also wager personal items as collateral when they run short on chips; knock them out and you claim the item, which on Steam ties directly into Team Fortress 2 as a cosmetic unlock. The Iron Curtain minigun, the Lugermorph pistol, the Dangeresque, Too? shades - these were originally delisted alongside the game in 2019 and are being reissued here. It adds a tangible reason to keep running tournaments beyond pure score-chasing. The single gap worth flagging is that there are no win-probability overlays or hand-strength indicators during a showdown, which anyone coming from modern poker software will miss immediately. This remaster is clearly aimed at two audiences and works differently for each. If you were there in 2010 and watched this disappear from storefronts, it plays exactly as you remember it, just cleaner and mechanically sounder. If you're coming in fresh, how much you get out of it will track almost exactly with how much the cast means to you - but the writing is sharp enough that even partial familiarity with one or two franchises carries you through.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamCrossover CastCharacter TellsTF2 Item UnlocksDialogue-DrivenCollateral SystemRemasterSingle-Player OnlyUnlockable Tables

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2.0 GHz Pentium 4 or equivalent
Memory
1GB RAM
Graphics
128MB DirectX 8.1-compliant video card DirectX®: Version 9.0c or better Hard Drive: 100MB space free Sound: DirectX 8.1…

Recommended

Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
95%(7,774)

Game Info

Developer
Skunkape Games
Publisher
Telltale Games
Release Date
Mar 5, 2026

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How much does Poker Night at the Inventory cost?

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What platforms is Poker Night at the Inventory available on?

Poker Night at the Inventory is available on PC.

When was Poker Night at the Inventory released?

Poker Night at the Inventory was released on 5 March 2026.

Who developed Poker Night at the Inventory?

Poker Night at the Inventory was developed by Skunkape Games and published by Telltale Games.