Version: 2008
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Texas Hold 'Em Poker (Game Boy Advance)

  • Quick specs
  • ESRB: Everyone
  • Genre: Games - miscellaneous / entertainment / educational
  • Elements: Miscellaneous - cards
  • See full specifications

GameSpot editors' review

Poker has soared in popularity in recent years thanks to the preponderance of televised tournaments. To capitalize on the craze, Majesco has released Texas Hold 'Em Poker, a Game Boy Advance game that's entirely focused on one of the more popular poker variations. It gets the sit-down experience right, especially with regard to computer-controlled personalities, but, between the game's bare-bones presentation, the complete lack of multiplayer modes, as well as a few other problems, it probably isn't going to become your main outlet for poker practice.

Texas Hold 'Em Pokerscreenshot
Check on a flush and you can lure the opponent into betting.

For those of you unfamiliar with Texas Hold 'Em Poker, the rules are deceptively simple. Each player at the table is dealt two cards facedown. These are called "hole cards." After an opening round of betting, the dealer tosses three cards faceup onto the table. This is called the "flop." Another round of betting occurs. The dealer then places another card onto the table, called the "turn." Again, a round of betting. After that, the dealer places a fifth and final card onto the table, which is called the "river." The goal of the game is to make the best hand of five cards by combining your hole cards with the community cards that the dealer deals. Theoretically, you can lure other players into betting or trick them into thinking you have better cards than you actually do by managing the way you bet.

Texas Hold 'Em Poker for the GBA includes two modes: quick play and career. Both modes let you join in during an in-progress cash game or enroll in a high-stakes tournament where the winner takes all. The main difference between the quick play and career modes is that the game keeps track of your winnings and rank in the career mode, and it starts you out in smaller casinos before letting you move onto the high rollers. There are multiple bet limits--$5/$10, $10/20, $20/$40, $40/$80, and so on--up to no limit, a style of hold 'em that allows you to bet your entire chip stack at any time. Unfortunately, the cartridge doesn't feature any multiplayer modes, which is a shame considering that poker is a highly social game, but then again, a deck of cards travels just about as easily as a GBA does.

Just like the actual sit-down game, the video game is easy to play and the CPU shows a goodly amount of skill. When your turn comes around, a menu lets you bet, raise, or fold. The game points out at the top of the screen whether you have a high card, pair, straight, or other worthwhile hand. You can also press the R button to toggle between a close-up view of your cards and a view that shows you how the entire table has bet (or folded). Each CPU player seems to be programmed with a unique personality, made evident by the number of bluffs and check raises that certain bots attempt hand after hand. The game also incorporates the use of forced blind bets, which cycle around the table and increase every few hands in order to keep the action going.

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Texas Hold 'Em Poker (Game Boy Advance)