Poker One
| Filename | poker-one.hqx |
|---|---|
| Size | 79.7 KB (81577 bytes) |
| Mac OS | System 7 |
| Architecture | PowerPC68K |
| Downloads | 4 |
PokerOne is a compact Macintosh poker game by Yasuhiro Kaizu, arranged for quick, easy play against computer opponents. It offers two-, three-, and four-player modes so a single user can sit down to a hand without setting up a table, and is tuned to run cleanly on mid-1990s Mac hardware.
Gameplay modes
The game presents three table sizes - two, three, and four players - letting the user pick how many computer-controlled opponents to face in a session. Each mode keeps the rules and pacing brisk so a hand can be played in a short sitting.
Design goals
The author describes PokerOne as a poker game arranged to be played "easily and speedily," emphasizing fast turns and an uncluttered interface over deep simulation or tournament rules.
System requirements
PokerOne needs a 68030, 68040, or PowerPC Macintosh running System 7.1 or later, a 9-inch or larger monitor, about 600 KB of free RAM, and 220 KB of disk space. On PowerPC machines it runs under 68K emulation.
Distribution
The title was contributed to the Info-Mac game archive from Japan and remains available there as a free download.
This file is part of the MacTrove archive. See the Thank You page for the upstream mirrors we rely on. It is BinHex encoded — use The Unarchiver to decode it.