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* In ''[[Creator/ChoiceOfGames Choice of]] [[Literature/CraftSequence the Deathless]]'', the player character plays poker with a group of fellow [[OccultLawFirm Occult Lawyers]], including a rival from school and a name partner at the player character's firm. The player can choose a general goal (impress the partner, show up the rival, win as much money as possible, etc.), but the poker game is not narrated play by play.

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* In ''[[Creator/ChoiceOfGames ''[[VideoGame/ChoiceOfGames Choice of]] [[Literature/CraftSequence the Deathless]]'', the player character plays poker with a group of fellow [[OccultLawFirm Occult Lawyers]], including a rival from school and a name partner at the player character's firm. The player can choose a general goal (impress the partner, show up the rival, win as much money as possible, etc.), but the poker game is not narrated play by play.
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* ''{{Series/Castle}}'' has Castle at the table with Beckett at times, and with a circle of authors that include James Patterson, Michael Connelly, Dennis Lehane, and the late Stephen J. Cannell (who now has an EmptyChairMemorial).

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* ''{{Series/Castle}}'' ''{{Series/Castle|2009}}'' has Castle at the table with Beckett at times, and with a circle of authors that include James Patterson, Michael Connelly, Dennis Lehane, and the late Stephen J. Cannell (who now has an EmptyChairMemorial).
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[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* In one 2006 commercial for Diet Pepsi, the "blue can" is told by his agent (Jay Mohr) that championship poker is big. The can makes the final table of a tournament that includes poker greats Scotty Nguyen, Phil "Poker Brat" Hellmuth, and Daniel "Kid Poker" Negreanu. Daniel asks, [[http://adland.tv/commercials/diet-pepsi-agent-poker-2006-30-usa "Whacha got, Blue Boy?"]] and the can shows a king of spades and queen of spades. "Blue Boy" proceeds to beat and clean out Daniel in short order.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* In the episodes 13-14 of the anime ''Manga/DragonQuestTheAdventureOfDai'', it is briefly shown that Dai interrupts the "fake heroes" playing a poker game. One of them even invites him to appease him in his anger because they haven't been acting as true heroes.
* There's a poker game in the anime episode 49 in ''Anime/{{Gintama}}''.
* In the final scene of the Endless Eight arc in the anime adaptation of ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'', Kyon plays a poker game against Koizumi without betting money. Kyon gets a Royal Flush. Since they just had gone through thousands of iterations of the GroundhogDayLoop, Kyon decides that if they live that same day again, he is going to make a bet this time.
* Up till now played twice in ''Manga/LiarGame''. Due to nature of the title, both times it had some variation of the rules to make it suit Liar Game Tournament -- once it was [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin 17-card poker]] and a later arc is concentrated around Bidding Poker (players don't draw cards but bid on them like in auction, similiarly they bid for cards other players discard when they want to change something with their hand).
* ''Anime/RioRainbowGate'' has its plot centered in a Casino, so poker is part of it, even though the series was based on a video game involving pachinko.
* ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders'' briefly features poker that is played with chips representing the protagonists' souls. The game is won by Jotaro making an immense bluff -- he doesn't even bother to look at his cards when dealt his hand, uses his [[FightingSpirit Stand]] to psyche his opponent out by lighting a cigarette and grabbing a glass of juice unnoticed, and proceeds to raise by betting the souls of literally every one of his TrueCompanions (or rather, he wagers the half that haven't been lost already against the half that have) as well as that of [[spoiler:his dying mother]] against the secret of [[BigBad DIO]]'s Stand. The end result? [[VillainOfTheWeek D'Arby]] tries to call his bluff, but ''physically can't'' because TheMobBossIsScarier... so he passes out instead, forfeiting the game by default and releasing all the souls he's trapped over years of gambling.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Card Games]]
* The ''TabletopGame/{{Deadlands}}'' CollectibleCardGame ''Doomtown'' uses poker hands to determine who wins shootouts, adding an extra dimension to deck construction. This being a CCG, you can stack your deck, but you can also get in trouble for it (and you tend to make less money, as the money-making phase includes a round of lowball poker). Each dude in your posse is either a "stud" or a "draw", letting you draw extra cards (as in stud poker) or discard cards and replace them (as in draw poker). The Dead Man's Hand (with a jack of diamonds) is the best hand possible, even beating five of a kind. (Unless someone else plays That's Two Pair!, in which case [[OhCrap it doesn't even beat three of a kind]]...)
* ''TabletopGame/HoylesRulesOfDragonPoker'' purports to be the most complicated version of poker (and any other game, for that matter) in creation. It's probably true.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* Some baddies in ''ComicBook/{{Empowered}}'' play poker in the story "Heroine Hold'em" -- and she, BoundAndGagged, is the prize!
* An issue of ComicBook/SpiderMan featured Spidey and several other heroes in a poker game. Story is they got together on a regular basis for low-stakes poker, with all the winning donated to charity. Kingpin shows up, saying he's heard about the game and puts up a ''huge'' amount of cash to each player, saying he's here to clean them out. At the end, it's only Spidey and Kingpin left. Kingpin lays it on thick, telling Spidey he can't win and he should bail. Spidey goes all in, Kingpin calls and shows off his Full House, proudly declaring himself the winner and starting to rake in the pot. Spidey says time out. "Hey, I only got two pair. I got that pair on nines on the table, and I got this pair of nines in my hand." Cue the most pissed off look in the history of comics on Kingpins' face.
* Wolverine is an avid poker player, and he's very good at it. Part of it is the fact that he's always completely unfazed no matter what the odds or how big the pot is. Considering some of the battles he's fought, it's not surprising that risking it all on a single hand isn't going to make him break a sweat. Once when he was in card game, someone told him that he was going to need a lot of luck. Logan simply replied "This is poker. ''Luck's got nothing to do with it.''" Another scene had him playing a high stakes game and it looked like he was going to lose. Wolverine went all in.
-->'''Wolverine:''' All in.\\
'''Other card player:''' Call.\\
'''Wolverine:''' You don't get it, bub. When I said all in, I meant ''all'' in. If you win, you get to kill me. If I win, I get to kill you.\\
'''Other card player:''' I fold.
* Periodically appears in ComicBook/{{Batman}} stories, especially after ComicBook/ThePenguin set up the [[BadGuyBar Iceberg Lounge]]. [[NietzscheWannabe Mr. Zsasz]] credits his StartOfDarkness to losing his entire family fortune in a game, in fact.
** On at least one occasion, Batman actually helped uncover a pair of cheaters who were robbing the Lounge blind, though that was mostly because [[MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot they'd kidnapped an ace magician to help them card-count through a wire]].

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* In the 17th chapter of the ''WesternAnimation/{{Rango}}'' fanfic ''Fanfic/OldWest'', [[{{Outlaw}} Rattlesnake Jake]] and [[DeterminedHomesteader Grace Glossy]] have a poker match at Grace's home to make up for her cancelled saloon night. The idea is Jake's and his purpose is in addition to passing time to get Grace to lower her guard and reveal about her past things he's curious about. Instead of playing for money, they trade knowledge of each other: the winner of a round asks one question and the loser has to answer truthfully. They both win enough rounds for Jake to learn [[TheFirstCutIsTheDeepest how Grace was married and suddenly abandoned by her husband]] (with her being pregnant no less) and for Grace to learn [[DarkAndTroubledPast how Jake's life as an outlaw started]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'', Grandma Wu is shown to play poker with her fellow retirees in Florida during the epilogue.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* ''Film/{{Rounders}}'', ''the'' modern poker movie. It follows small-time poker pro Mike [=McDermott=] as he loses his entire bankroll in one ill-considered game, vows to quit poker forever, and [[ForegoneConclusion reneges on his vow]]. Edward Norton co-stars as his self-destructive, compulsive-cheater childhood friend. Along with Chris Moneymaker's historic WSOP win and the popularization of televised poker with "hole cams" so that the audience can see the players' hidden cards, it's credited with the early-[=2000s=] poker boom.
* Film/JamesBond plays poker with Le Chiffre and wins in ''Film/{{Casino Royale|2006}}''. In [[Literature/CasinoRoyale the original book]], it was baccarat instead. Arguably an improvement, as baccarat is based mostly on luck. Poker wasn't the high-stakes casino game it is today back when the novel was written. The only game played in casinos for stakes relevant to Le Chiffre, and in which the house didn't massively stack the odds against you, was baccarat. It also [[AdaptationDistillation allowed them to skip over what would have been a long explanation of baccarat rules]] for an audience that would be mostly unfamiliar with the game.
* ''Film/GoneWithTheWind'':
** Gerald O'Hara is a good poker player (esp. when there's heavy drinking involved), and Rhett Butler worked as a professional poker player earlier in his life.
** Rhett is also shown deliberately losing to the officers running the Union prisoner-of-war camp he's being held in, and being a very good sport about it. The officers speak frankly of finding it hard to dislike him because he "loses his money so easily.'' This plays to Rhett's advantage, as he is well-liked by the guards and treated well.
* Used as a plot point in ''Film/{{Penelope|2006}}'', as Lemon finds "Max", a habitual poker player, at his usual Texas Hold'em table. His ability to later walk away from the game shows his character development.
* Poker night at Oscar's house is a setting for many of the best gags in ''Theater/TheOddCouple''.
* ''Film/TheCincinnatiKid''', a poker film starring Creator/SteveMcQueenActor, set during {{The Great Depression}}.
* ''Film/{{Maverick}}'', where every major character plays poker, and they all end up in a poker tournament for a half million dollars.
* ''Film/{{Tombstone}}''
-->'''Wyatt Earp:''' Come on, Doc! You've always said gambling's an honest trade!\\
'''Doc Holliday:''' No, I've said ''poker'' is an honest trade. Only fools buck the tiger (a common pseudonym for playing Faro).
* In ''Film/InTime'', the protagonist wins an AbsurdlyHighStakesGame. He has 8-4 versus the queens of his opponent, the BigBad. The board is: Queen -- seven -- jack (flop); six (turn); five (river). In other words, the villain was way ahead with his set of queens, but thanks to the MagicPokerEquation, the hero got a straight with the last card. Don't try to play poker like that, unless you ''want'' to lose.
* ''Film/LockStockAndTwoSmokingBarrels'' has a game called three-card brag, a British game (mentioned as one of the ancestors of poker by Website/TheOtherWiki) with some fairly major rules differences, especially regarding betting. It's perhaps even more suitable than poker for setting up the "hero loses silly amount of money to villain and spends rest of film trying to repay it" plot, as Brag has a way of getting out of hand very quickly indeed and is typically not played for table stakes.
* ''Film/ILoveYouMan'' include a scene in which Creator/PaulRudd's character attempts to make more male friends by joining his brother-in-law's regular poker game. He infuriates the other players by playing incredibly badly but winning by [[BeginnersLuck dumb luck]].
-->''I have nothing. I have five spades.''\\
''That's a FLUSH!''
* ''Film/MollysGame'' is entirely driven by the glamour and risk of extremely high-stake poker sessions, although relatively little of it is about actual gameplay.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* Popular as a motif in the works of Creator/TimPowers, often with supernatural implications attached.
** ''Literature/LastCall'' focuses on a supernatural variant of poker, played with tarot cards, that could literally be used to win or lose bodies and souls; tied together with Jungian archetypes and the Fisher King myth, the BigBad of the work uses it to win [[GrandTheftMe bodies that he could hop to.]]
** ''Literature/{{Declare}}'' focuses on [[OurGeniesAreDifferent an entirely different type of magic]], but an interrupted poker game between Andrew Hale and Kim Philby is central to one of its subplots, single-hand seven-card stud, sudden death rules. The real tension isn't in their respective hands--which is determined by pure luck--but rather in the fact that there are different prizes for declaring high and declaring low; high hand wins the right to go after a woman both are pursuing, low hand wins djinni-assisted immortal life. However they ''[[TitleDrop declare]]'' will determine what they win.
* ''Little Myth Marker'' from the ''Literature/MythAdventures'' series centers around Dragon Poker -- a ridiculously complex version of the game. Fans, of course, have codified the rules and filled in the blanks (see Tabletop Games).
* In the ''Literature/Foreigner1994'' series poker is [[KlingonsLoveShakespeare one of the few human games that have become popular]] among the alien ''[[RubberForeheadAlien atevi]]''. Given that the atevi [[GoodWithNumbers are naturals at both card counting and calculating statistics]], they're ''much'' better at poker than humans.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/{{Bottom}}'': At the beginning of "Gas", Richie and Eddie are playing Poker, for avoiding household tasks. Eddie realises Richie is cheating when he declares three pairs, and he is indeed hiding cards in his shoes and underpants.
* ''Series/{{Deadwood}}''. Dramatizes the death of Wild Bill Hickok at a poker table.
%%* ''Series/{{Maverick}}'', the original TV series on which the above film was based.
* ''Battlestar Galactica'', both [[Series/BattlestarGalactica1978 old]] and [[Series/BattlestarGalactica2003 new]], featured a very poker-like card game called "Pyramid," which, bizarrely, shares its name with a very basketball-like sport. The reboot fixes this by naming the card game "Triad."
* ''Series/MonarchOfTheGlen'': In an attempt to repay gambling debts, Molly invites her creditor to play poker. He cheats by bringing cards marked on the reverse side with ultraviolet ink, which he can see through special glasses.
* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''
** In one episode, the brothers have to face a he-witch who plays poker betting life years instead of money.
** Dean also finances the brothers, at least in part, by cheating at poker games. In the episode where the boys allow themselves to get caught in order to infiltrate a prison, Dean comments that playing poker against the other inmates is "like picking low-hanging fruit".
%%* ''Thursday's Game'', a very funny '70s MadeForTVMovie written by Creator/JamesLBrooks and starring Creator/GeneWilder and Creator/BobNewhart.
%%* ''Tilt'', an ESPN series created at the height of the WSOP popularity starring Chris Bauer, Eddie Cibrian, and Creator/MichaelMadsen.
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'' franchise:
** To the point of a RunningGag in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''. Frakes even points out what a badass gambler his character must be. He's playing with an android who can count the cards, a guy who might be able to see through the cards, and his [[TheEmpath empathic]] ex-girlfriend... and usually cleans their clock.
*** An episode in which a duplicate Riker is discovered (a [[AppliedPhlebotinum transporter accident]] is involved) who was stranded on a deserted planet some years ago features a particularly tense moment in which the two Rikers face off over a poker game. Stranded!Riker loses and complains, "You always had the better hand... in everything."
*** One teaser has Data playing poker on the holodeck with Sir Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, and Stephen Hawking (appearing AsHimself).
*** In "Cause and Effect," the ''Enterprise'' finds itself in a stable time loop which includes the same poker game played over and over. Each iteration of the loop plays out slightly differently; the cards are the same, but subliminal memories of previous loops cause the players to make different moves. After a few loops, they are able to predict each card as it is revealed. In the final iteration, Data programs himself to subconsciously stack the deck as a way of hinting to himself how to escape the loop.
*** In the "Time's Arrow" two-parter, Data is unexpectedly sent back to [[TimeTravel 19th-century America]] with nothing but a Starfleet uniform that folks he meets tend to mistake for pajamas, and his communicator. He uses the communicator to buy into a poker game (luckily, the five-card stud favored on the ''Enterprise'' is more period-appropriate than the Hold'Em that tends to be played by those of us in the 20th century) and walks away with enough dosh to check himself into a swanky hotel room and buy raw materials to [[MacGyvering MacGyver up]] an alien-detector, with enough left over to buy period clothes. Those seedy-looking card sharps must've been loaded....
*** The final scene of the Series Finale is of Captain Picard finally joining the rest of the senior officers for a game of poker.
** In ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'', the game isn't really featured, but by way of analogy represents [[TheKirk Kirk]]'s hallmark of using guts and bluffing in contrast to [[TheSpock Spock]]'s preference for [[SmartPeoplePlayChess the logical strategy of chess]]. Which is a ''great'' analogy [[StrawVulcan except then they try breaking it]].
-->'''Kirk''': Not TabletopGame/{{chess}}, Spock. Poker!
** Well, there's "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E17APieceOfTheAction A Piece of the Action]]", in which the bad guys are playing poker. Kirk one-ups them with ... fizzbin (the rules of which he invents on the spot).
--> '''Kirk''': It's a man's game, but of course it's probably a little beyond you. It requires intelligence.
* Similar to the ''[[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Star Trek]]'' example, from the ''Series/DoctorWho'' arc [[Recap/DoctorWhoS26E1Battlefield "Battlefield"]]:
-->'''Morgaine''': I could always beat you at chess, Merlin.\\
'''The Doctor''': Who said anything about playing chess? I'm playing Poker ''[Ace knocks over Morgaine and throws Excalibur to the Doctor]'' And I've got an [[{{Pun}} Ace]] up my sleeve!
* The ''Series/{{Friends}}'' episode "The One with the Poker". After hearing stories about the guys' poker night the girls ask to join in. They're pretty terrible at it until they get some coaching from a relative of Monica's. Eventually [[WillTheyOrWontThey Ross and Rachel]] are left competing over the final hand and borrow money from the others to keep their bets going when they run out of their own cash. Rachel eventually wins due to Ross folding. The episode ends with Joey and Chandler trying to turn over Ross' cards to find out if he actually lost or threw the game to cheer Rachel up after she lost out on a job she really wanted.
* The poker game is a major scene in the film and play: ''Theater/TheOddCouple'', but it also takes place in the TV show.
* ''My Boys'' features poker at PJ's house in most episodes.
* All the monsters of ''Series/KamenRiderBlade'' are categorized according to a 52-card deck [[spoiler:plus Jokers]]. The four Riders themselves represent the Aces, and each gradually collects the monsters and powers of the other 12 in their suit. Poker hands specifically come into play when Blade's in his SuperMode, as his strongest attacks are straight flushes that use five continuous Spade cards. A four-of-a-kind attack, with each Rider providing one card, has also been seen.
* ''{{Series/Castle}}'' has Castle at the table with Beckett at times, and with a circle of authors that include James Patterson, Michael Connelly, Dennis Lehane, and the late Stephen J. Cannell (who now has an EmptyChairMemorial).
* The Creator/FoodNetwork show ''Kitchen Casino'' has as its last round "Chef Poker," which is a hybrid of Texas Hold 'Em and 5-Card Draw Poker. Host Bill Rancic deals out a "flop" of 3 cards with ingredients two chefs MUST BOTH use in their dishes. Each chef is also dealt two "hole cards" which are two unique ingredients to ''their dish only.'' After looking at their hole cards as well as the flop, they can either keep both ingredients, or discard one or both of them for new ones which ''MUST BE USED'' (no more discards) for that dish.
* One of Series/FamilyMatters episodes deals with Carl Winslow, his cop partners and Hanriette's boss playing Five Card Draw, and Steve Urkel joining in. Steve loses all the money he had saved for an accordion, but then earns that and the money Carl had lent him before, winning the last game with two pairs... of tens.
* The short-lived ESPN scripted series ''Tilt'' was built around poker, but focused more on the politics behind the scenes. In particular, Creator/MichaelMadsen's character is portrayed much like The Godfather.
* The obscure GameShow ''Series/SuperPayCards'' (and its predecessor, simply called ''Pay Cards'') is based around poker, albeit with a memory game-style element added into the mix.
* ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'' had in its pricing game rotation from 1975 to 2007 the "Poker Game". The contestant was presented with four prizes with three-digit prices. They selected two of them to create a five-digit poker hand (the lowest digit was discarded), then would either keep the hand or pass it to the "house"; the other hand was then made up with the remaining two prizes. The contestant won if they got a better hand than the "house" (since there were no suits and straights didn't count, the best hand was the one with the most matching digits). The game was retired because of its confusing rules and its impossibility to offer prices worth more than $999.
* ''Series/{{Qi}}'': In "Knights And Knaves" Victoria Coren-Mitchell makes this pithy comment on the difference between poker and [[TabletopGame/{{Chess}} chess]]:
-->'''Victoria''': "As Martin Amis once said, 'In chess, the properties of a bishop are fixed. In poker, it's all wobbled through the prism of personality.' ... But do you know when he said that, [[Creator/StephenFry Stephen]]? It was after a poker game that you and I and he all played many years ago...\\
'''Stephen Fry''': Yes, I remember, with a then-unknown Creator/RickyGervais...\\
'''Victoria''': Ricky Gervais, who was knocked out, got up and said, 'What am I supposed to do now?' and you said, [[BlackComedy "There's a shotgun in the drawer']]."
* ''Series/TheWestWing'': The senior staff are seen playing together during slow evenings in the office a couple of times. The first time, Bartlet keeps interrupting to ask the staff trivia questions that they have to answer before he'll make his bets. The second time they play, in season four, the game is interrupted by a woman firing a gun at the White House which forces the Secret Service to crash the building.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Pinball Games]]
* ''Jokerz!'' was a late-80's pinball game where "Draw Poker" was a feature: you were given the ace and king of hearts, and a wheel spun for the other three cards. Depending on the hand you got when the wheel stopped, you either got points, the chance for an extra ball, or even a replay for a royal flush. The whole motif was a King and Queen playing poker.
* ''Jack*Bot'' was where "Pinbot" and his wife, "The Machine," host [[InSpace an intergalactic casino experience.]] One of the game features was "Draw Poker" as well, where you had to build your five-card hand to either a full house (aces full of deuces) if you played clean, or four aces if you "cheated".
* ''High Roller Casino'' also had poker as a game.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Deadlands}}'':
** Hucksters work their magic by drawing poker hands (in-character, they actually gamble with demons and ''cheat''). The CollectibleCardGame ''Doomtown'' also has a strong poker motif, see above.
** If you cast Soul Blast and draw a Dead Man's Hand, [[MythologyGag your target automatically dies]]. Even if it's the FinalBoss.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theatre]]
* Poker night at Oscar's house is a setting for many of the best gags in ''Theater/TheOddCouple''.
* ''Theater/{{Fiorello}}'' has the song "Politics and Poker," which largely speaks for itself.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* Seen various places in the ''VideoGame/WingCommander'' series, including a couple of [[TheMagicPokerEquation special hands]].
* In ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney'', after [[spoiler:Phoenix lost his job as a lawyer in one case 7 years ago]], he got a job at a Russian restaurant, in which he became a famous poker player, as he hadn't lost a single game in those 7 years. While Phoenix is a good player in his own right, [[spoiler:he gets a little help from his adopted daughter Trucy, who has the same Perceive ability that Apollo does. She uses it to pick up on the tells that Phoenix misses.]]
* ''VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption'' uses poker as a minigame. You can actually cheat in it too using a certain outfit to slip a card up your sleeve.
* ''VideoGame/PokerNightAtTheInventory'' and [[VideoGame/PokerNight2 its sequel]] is a {{crossover}} poker game, with the players being characters from ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'', ''VideoGame/SamAndMaxFreelancePolice'', ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'', ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'', ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands}}'', ''Franchise/EvilDead'', and ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers''.
* You can win credits playing poker with your engineering staff in ''VideoGame/MassEffect2''. It's played for laughs, though: the most you can win is pretty insignificant in the grand scheme of things, and the action occurs off-screen anyway.
* In ''VideoGame/FarCry3'', you can find backroom poker games that you can join all over the island map. Later on, [[spoiler:you play against the main villain, Hoyt, where your life is on the line if you lose]].
* Some games in the ''VideoGame/{{Yakuza}}'' series feature poker as a minigame. ''VideoGame/Yakuza0'' in particular has a choice between Texas Hold 'em, Pineapple Hold 'em or Omaha Hold 'em pokers.
* In ''[[Creator/ChoiceOfGames Choice of]] [[Literature/CraftSequence the Deathless]]'', the player character plays poker with a group of fellow [[OccultLawFirm Occult Lawyers]], including a rival from school and a name partner at the player character's firm. The player can choose a general goal (impress the partner, show up the rival, win as much money as possible, etc.), but the poker game is not narrated play by play.
* Five Card Draw and Texas Hold'Em are among the games included in ''VideoGame/ClubhouseGames''. The sequel, ''51 Worldwide Classics'', only has Texas Hold'Em.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* ''Webcomic/TheChapelChronicles'': Chapel is an avid game player and poker is often the [[http://www.chapelchronicles.com/comic/39 game of choice]].
* ''Webcomic/PlusEV'', which is about nothing but poker.
* [[https://pbfcomics.com/comics/christmas-cards/ This strip]] of ''ComicStrip/ThePerryBibleFellowship''.
* There's also the comic ''Gods Playing Poker''.
* In ''Webcomic/{{Roommates}}'', the Erlkönig has a monthly poker game with some pretty scary types (like the Slender Man)... in his son's kitchen, for the great horror of his [[http://asherhyder.deviantart.com/art/Roommates-312-Fear-367171046 roommates]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Talkartoons}}'' short "The Ace of Spades" is themed around Bimbo the Dog causing trouble at a local poker house.
* The centerpiece of one of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries''' most iconic episodes, [[Recap/BatmanTheAnimatedSeriesE46AlmostGotIm "Almost Got 'im"]]. To nobody's surprise, ComicBook/TheJoker cheats through his teeth the whole damn game.
[[/folder]]
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