Imagine staring across a dimly lit, smoky table, trying to maintain a stone-cold poker face while a heavily armed Russian mercenary and a hyperkinetic rabbit argue over who gets to buy the next round. That is the delightfully stressful and deeply chaotic premise of Poker Night at the Inventory.
If you’ve ever felt the sweat-inducing tension of trying to outsmart the deck in games like Balatro or Prominence Poker, we get why this premise hits. The extra pressure here isn’t just odds and outs—it’s the moment you’re trying not to laugh, panic, or spite-call because the table talk got in your head.
Originally a cult classic, Poker Night at the Inventory isn’t just a card game; it’s an immersive crossover event disguised as a tournament. It blends the structure of No Limit Texas Hold ’em with character-driven comedy, so a standard hand can turn into a little psychological cage match—without ever stopping being poker.
What is Poker Night at the Inventory?

Poker Night at the Inventory is a single-player Texas Hold ’em simulation, but the entire experience is built around the personalities across from you. You’re seated in first-person, with a slick, diegetic overlay for chips, hole cards, and betting options.
The gameplay loop is clean: you start with a bankroll, the blinds rise, and you have to bet, call, raise, or fold your way to bankrupting the other four players. The “story” isn’t cutscenes—it’s the table itself. A big swing pot, a bad beat, a stubborn hero call—those moments become the punchlines.
Where the game truly shines is how its unique mechanics interact and stack. You’re not throwing dice or playing a separate minigame, but you are reading behavior. Each character—The Heavy (Team Fortress 2), Max (Sam & Max), Tycho (Penny Arcade), and Strong Bad (Homestar Runner)—has distinct AI routines, betting patterns, and visual “tells,” so you can actually learn what “danger” looks like for each opponent.
Who is the developer of Poker Night at the Inventory?
Poker Night at the Inventory was originally created by Telltale Games, the studio known for narrative adventures like The Walking Dead and The Wolf Among Us—and you can feel that DNA in how much the game cares about timing, delivery, and character voice.
This 2026 remaster is being handled by Skunkape Games. If that name rings a bell, it’s because Skunkape is made up of former Telltale developers and has built a reputation through its Sam & Max work.
On the technical side, Skunkape has also talked about more than a basic touch-up: a visual refresh, gamepad support, adjustable buy-ins, and even smarter-feeling opponents. If those improvements land, the remaster should feel meaningfully better—not just prettier.
When will Poker Night at the Inventory be released?

The remastered Poker Night at the Inventory will be released on March 5, 2026. The game is expected to launch on PC via Steam, bringing this delisted classic back to modern storefronts with updated resolutions and widescreen support.
Why was Poker Night at the Inventory delisted?
If you missed it the first time, you’re not alone—and the reason was actually pretty boring: licensing. The game was delisted in 2019, and because the roster is built on multiple outside IPs, keeping it on sale meant renewing agreements that didn’t stick after Telltale’s collapse.
The upside is that the game was always built for replay. There’s a huge pool of recorded dialogue, and even when you’re playing standard Hold ’em, the table talk changes how the same hands feel. In practice, it’s the kind of game where you’ll remember the insult you took on a fold almost as clearly as the pot you won.
Compared to Poker Night 2, the original is the cleaner, more focused version of the idea: a tighter Texas Hold ’em loop with a cast that still feels weirdly perfect together.
FAQs
Why was Poker Night at the Inventory removed from Steam?
It was removed in May 2019 because the licensing agreements expired for third-party characters such as Strong Bad, Tycho, and the Heavy.
Who are the characters in Poker Night at the Inventory?
You play against four characters: Max (from Sam & Max), The Heavy (from Team Fortress 2), Strong Bad (from Homestar Runner), and Tycho (from Penny Arcade).
Is Poker Night at the Inventory multiplayer?
No, Poker Night at the Inventory is a strictly single-player experience. The entire draw of the game is playing against the complex AI and enjoying the characters’ scripted, dynamic dialogue.
Will there be a Poker Night 3?
While there are no official announcements for a third brand-new entry, the fact that Skunkape Games is re-releasing the original gives fans hope that a new crossover poker tournament could happen in the future.
