Does PartyPot support Poker? Yes — poker is fully supported through PartyPot's dedicated Poker Mode. It tracks buy-ins and rebuys, posts small and big blinds, automatically allocates the main pot and side pots when players go all-in, keeps a full audit log, and squares everyone up with Smart Settlement. Works for Texas Hold'em, Omaha, and other chip-based variants.
Does PartyPot support Poker?
Yes — poker is fully supported through PartyPot's dedicated Poker Mode. It tracks buy-ins and rebuys, posts small and big blinds, automatically allocates the main pot and side pots when players go all-in, keeps a full audit log, and squares everyone up with Smart Settlement. Works for Texas Hold'em, Omaha, and other chip-based variants.
Detailed Answer
Yes — poker is fully supported through PartyPot's dedicated Poker Mode.
What Poker Mode does:
How to run a poker night:
1. Create a room and choose Poker Mode
2. Set the buy-in and blind levels
3. Players join by scanning the QR code — no account needed
4. Deal real cards; PartyPot tracks the chips, pots, and side pots
5. Tap Settle Up at the end for the who-pays-who breakdown
Supported poker variants:
Want to plan or settle a game in your browser first? Try the free poker settle-up calculator and chip distribution calculator.
Related Topics
Related Questions
What games does PartyPot support?
PartyPot fully supports Ban Luck (Chinese Blackjack), Blackjack, In Between (Acey Deucey), Mahjong, Big Two (Chor Dai Ti), Baccarat, 8/9 (Pok Deng), Monopoly, and any game that requires money or score tracking. Poker (Texas Hold'em, Omaha) has a dedicated Poker Mode with small/big blinds, automatic main pot and side pot allocation, buy-in tracking, and Smart Settlement.
What is the Center Pot?
The Center Pot is a shared digital pot for games like In Between, Ban Luck, and poker. The banker controls payouts — including partial distributions — keeping gameplay fair and organized. All pot activity is logged in the transaction history.
How is a side pot calculated when someone goes all-in?
A side pot is created when a player goes all-in for less than the current bet. The all-in player can only win the main pot, which is capped at their all-in amount matched by each other player still in the hand. Every chip bet beyond that amount goes into a separate side pot that only the players who kept betting can win.
Who gets the odd chip when splitting a poker pot?
When a split pot does not divide evenly, the leftover odd chip goes to the player in the worst position — by the most common convention, the first active player clockwise from the dealer button. In a high-low split game, the odd chip goes to the high hand. The point is to have a fixed rule agreed in advance so there is never an argument.