Compare Telltale Texas Hold ‘Em prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Telltale. Published by Telltale Games. Released on 6/17/2008. Available on PC. Genres: Casual.

Telltale's very first game is a scrappy single-player poker tournament where the comedy does more heavy lifting than the card AI, worth a look if you want something light, but seasoned poker players will fold in under an hour.

I went into this expecting a curiosity piece, and that is exactly what I got. Telltale Texas Hold 'Em is the studio's debut title, originally built as a tech demo to prove their engine could handle facial animation and reactive dialogue, and the DNA of that origin story is obvious in every hand you play. The actual poker mechanics are standard no-limit Texas Hold 'Em, hole cards, flop, turn, river, betting rounds, with no difficulty sliders, no customisation, and no multiplayer. You hit Start Tournament, and that is the full menu. What makes it more than a glorified screensaver is the four opponents sitting across the table: Harry Weinhead, a wily businessy type who plays tight and smug; Boris Krinkle, a thick-necked bully who telegraphs his bluffs more than he knows; Theodore Dudebrough, the laid-back slacker who disguises loose play behind sheer coolness; and Grandma Shaky, the wildcard who folds often but punishes you hard when she stays in. Each character has voiced reactions, animated expressions, and personality-specific banter that fires off during betting rounds. Reading the table here genuinely means reading the characters, not just the chips. Community reviewers have consistently pointed to that cast chemistry as the reason they stuck around past a single session. The honest weaknesses are hard to overlook, though. Resolution options are limited, and the character models show their age significantly, this is a 2005-era title that has not received a visual facelift. There are no achievements, no unlockables, no structured progression, and no online component. Experienced poker players will find the AI soft enough to run over in the first tournament. The game has a single mode, period. If you arrive expecting Poker Night at the Inventory levels of polish and licensed character depth, know that this is the rough prototype those games were built on. Who should actually play it? Newcomers to Texas Hold 'Em get a friendly, funny tutorial wrapper that makes the rules feel far less dry than a YouTube explainer. Telltale completionists who want to trace the studio's lineage back to its roots will find genuine historical curiosity value here. Casual players looking for a thirty-minute wind-down session with some dry comedy will get exactly that. Anyone else is probably better served by the Poker Night games, which carry everything this laid the groundwork for and then multiply it. Alex, Scout Team

Telltale Texas Hold ‘Em
Casual

Telltale Texas Hold ‘Em

Jun 17, 2008TelltaleTelltale Games
GamerScout Says

Telltale's very first game is a scrappy single-player poker tournament where the comedy does more heavy lifting than the card AI, worth a look if you want something light, but seasoned poker players will fold in under an hour.

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About Telltale Texas Hold ‘Em

I went into this expecting a curiosity piece, and that is exactly what I got. Telltale Texas Hold 'Em is the studio's debut title, originally built as a tech demo to prove their engine could handle facial animation and reactive dialogue, and the DNA of that origin story is obvious in every hand you play. The actual poker mechanics are standard no-limit Texas Hold 'Em, hole cards, flop, turn, river, betting rounds, with no difficulty sliders, no customisation, and no multiplayer. You hit Start Tournament, and that is the full menu. What makes it more than a glorified screensaver is the four opponents sitting across the table: Harry Weinhead, a wily businessy type who plays tight and smug; Boris Krinkle, a thick-necked bully who telegraphs his bluffs more than he knows; Theodore Dudebrough, the laid-back slacker who disguises loose play behind sheer coolness; and Grandma Shaky, the wildcard who folds often but punishes you hard when she stays in. Each character has voiced reactions, animated expressions, and personality-specific banter that fires off during betting rounds. Reading the table here genuinely means reading the characters, not just the chips. Community reviewers have consistently pointed to that cast chemistry as the reason they stuck around past a single session. The honest weaknesses are hard to overlook, though. Resolution options are limited, and the character models show their age significantly, this is a 2005-era title that has not received a visual facelift. There are no achievements, no unlockables, no structured progression, and no online component. Experienced poker players will find the AI soft enough to run over in the first tournament. The game has a single mode, period. If you arrive expecting Poker Night at the Inventory levels of polish and licensed character depth, know that this is the rough prototype those games were built on. Who should actually play it? Newcomers to Texas Hold 'Em get a friendly, funny tutorial wrapper that makes the rules feel far less dry than a YouTube explainer. Telltale completionists who want to trace the studio's lineage back to its roots will find genuine historical curiosity value here. Casual players looking for a thirty-minute wind-down session with some dry comedy will get exactly that. Anyone else is probably better served by the Poker Night games, which carry everything this laid the groundwork for and then multiply it. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamNo-Limit Hold'EmCharacter-DrivenSingle Tournament ModeBeginner-Friendly TutorialComedy DialogueLow System RequirementsHistorical Curiosity

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
68%(370)

Game Info

Developer
Telltale
Publisher
Telltale Games
Release Date
Jun 17, 2008

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