Texas Hold'em
The cleanest format for showing street-by-street release, final board evidence, and participant verification.
For investors, game pages should not be basic rules pages. They should explain how Hold'em, Omaha, and tournaments become proof distribution surfaces, retention loops, and market entry wedges.
Support docs describe common cash buy-ins as 20 big blinds minimum and 100 big blinds maximum.
The playable table exposes community cards, hole cards, pot, stacks, dealer button, action timer, and bet controls.
New accounts receive practice chips so onboarding can happen before real-money play.
Practice tables include an AI Coach surface for real-time suggestions.
A credible poker table gives Flux a place to prove fairness, demonstrate UX craft, and build repeat behavior.
The investor story is not that Flux supports poker formats. The story is that each format reinforces the same trust layer.
Game pages should route investors to product proof, retention logic, and rollout sequencing.
Player-facing calls to play should be secondary until the investor narrative is complete.
The cleanest format for showing street-by-street release, final board evidence, and participant verification.
A deeper format where hidden-card privacy is more obviously valuable to serious players.
Event infrastructure can become a retention calendar, partner surface, and content engine.
Invite-only tables and community operators can support controlled acquisition without mass-market noise.
Flux Poker is invite-only while the product, fairness tooling, and operating controls mature. Use this for player access, product demos, creator tables, or partner testing.
Game formats are not isolated pages. They are adoption surfaces for the same proof architecture.