To learn which poker hands beat which, see the graphic below. Try using Card Suggest in the options menu for the game to exchange cards for you, but be aware that this is imperfect by design. The best strategy is usually to aim for pairs: keep the ones you have, or just keep the highest card you have if you have no pairs, and exchange the rest.

Unfortunately, the many combinations of clothing and stripping orders the player has makes the image space necessary for this unfeasibly large. There is also no space on the UI to show the player character.


Free Download Poker Strip Game


tag_hash_104 🔥 https://urloso.com/2yjXYF 🔥



2) convert the pictures into a standard (e.g. Micropainter/62-sector) format; in the heir of AMC I once found a small Basic program that could convert Strippoker pictures into standard Gr. 15 Micropainter pictures. Used this program to convert all Strippoker pictures (well, only the girls/women) and when done deleted it, since I thought I would not need it any longer; years later my diskette with converted Strippoker pics. was defective and errm, the converter long gone (and deleted!) and I found out that no-one else had this converter... but maybe someone wants to write such a simple Strippoker (45 sectors) to Micropainter (62 sectors) converter ?!? Then you can display all the pics in a Gr. 15 slideshow...

I realized that Strip Poker was remade for both Atari ST and Amiga. Same pictures in the same postures, only with a bit more colour and detail. Possibly those could be used as a source for a remastered Atari 8-bit version, whether it requires VBXE or not. Given that most of them maintain their posture between stages, I'd think the images were drawn, perhaps based on nude models that were digitally clothed. Later games obviously used digitized photos all the way, but those strip poker games also had the girl (or guy, in rare cases) hold a different posture after each clothes change. Perhaps it is me who have some strange perversion, but I prefer if my opponent maintains the same posture all the way.

I kind of like the idea of a Strip Poker engine. Port it across everything. Like Unity or Unreal Engine, or Renpy (visual novel engine). I know there was some video strip poker on the Amiga, and at one point I had one for PC, but I still remember the flesh color shaded 8-bit version. I played a bit of Strip Poker 2 on the ST, and I believe all of them had at least one data disk.

Interesting comments from Doug McFarland. From what I gather, it started with a regular poker game on the Apple II that Doug wanted to add Atari graphics to. However it seems the game engine was first ported to the C64, then ported to Atari. He writes that the original pictures were drawn pixel by pixel, just as expected.

Artworx was a Naples, Florida software company that produced and supported a line of computer games (primarily specializing in poker and other card games) from 1981 to 2015.[1] It is named after the founder's given name. At first the company published a variety of games, including titles in adventure and arcade-action genres, but were later best known for a strip poker series.

Some other Artworx titles are Bridge 8.0 and King of Solitaire, although these have not sold as well as the poker games. Artworx' titles were released by partner companies in regional markets: Anco in Europe, CDS Software and Guildhall in the United Kingdom, and Artworx in the rest of the world.

The Strip Poker series ran from 1982 to 1995 over five games.[2] The player is a presumed male who plays strip poker against attractive women. The games received generally positive reviews over the series history. Critics appreciated the game's sense of humour and for effectively using their limited graphics to create titillating imagery. Others felt that a video game was a depressing way for players to view such content, when alternatives like Playboy were available.

The player, a male poker player, plays a card game against the computer who is represented by an attractive woman. As the player beats the woman in the game, she proceeds to take off items of clothing as a reward. The core models in the series are Suzi and Melissa. Other characters are available in certain games through expansion packs.

Billed as the first home computer strip poker video game, Strip Poker was ported to numerous platforms, including the Apple II (1982), Commodore 64 (1983), Atari 8-bit family (1983), MS-DOS (1985), Amiga (1986), Atari ST (1987) and Apple IIGS (1987). Data disks were available that offered additional opponents; these disks have since become very hard to find. Artworx's first poker game was followed by several sequels.

Tilt enjoyed Strip Poker: A Sizzling Game of Chance's graphics.[20] Computer Gamer felt that picking up a Playboy would be a better alternative to playing this game.[21] Meanwhile Micro praised the game's sense of humour.[20] Video Game Critic felt the game would appeal to players who wanted to see titillating content that was old-fashioned and pixelated.[22] Aktueller Software Markt had a mixed opinion on the game, questioning its purpose.[23] Info noted that besides the obvious draw of the title, it was the only game on the Amiga that offered a reasonable version of poker.[24]

Nick, just to clarify Quilters' Strip Poker is NOT a card game!! It is a hilarious and often riotous game involving 2.5" strips of fabric often played by quilters at a quilting retreat. Whoever wins the game winds up with ALL of the 2.5" strips and my guild expects the winner to make a quilt from them to show the guild at the next meeting. Blessings ALL!

Hi Sharon. We play L, R, C version as well. I don't know about other options. I did find a sort of card game involving 2.5" strip when I googled quilters strip poker - but the point was to make blocks from the patterns printed on the cards. But I couldn't find where to buy the cards. We play other sorts of games too. Just google games for quilting retreats. I'll bet you will find all sorts of fun games for quilters.

There are 20 poker rooms in the Las Vegas area, and we at PokerAtlas provide complete and up-to-date information about every room in every location including Downtown, Henderson & Southeast, North Las Vegas, Summerlin & Northwest, and The Strip. Click on any of the poker room listings below for more information including poker tournament schedules, cash games, player reviews, contact information, amenities, promotions and more.

Get undressed with over 150 characters in this community-developed strip poker game! Get comfortable with a large variety of men and women, faithfully adapted in personality and appearance from popular and niche media!


Las Vegas remains at the epicenter of the live poker economy, with more places to play than any other city in the U.S. With around 20 live poker venues to choose from, tourists and locals alike always enjoy plenty of options when it comes to competing on the live felt.

Some poker rooms, like Wynn, Aria, and Bellagio, are widely considered by poker pros as the best in the city. While those venues thrive as the heart of poker activity on the Las Vegas Strip, other hidden gems await for those willing to venture away from the busiest part of the city.

As far as poker rooms go, nothing quite captures the old-school Las Vegas experience like the Golden Nugget. The cozy setup at the venerable venue features 13 tables and is currently the only place to play live poker in downtown Las Vegas. 0852c4b9a8

free download idm 6.12 full version

free windows vista password cracker free download

kruti dev 10 font free download