Product proof
Every game format becomes a way to show that Flux can turn fairness into a player-facing experience.
Flux keeps poker formats familiar while making the underlying proof system visible. Hold'em teaches the thesis, Omaha stresses hidden-card privacy, and tournaments create scheduled liquidity, social proof, and retention moments.
Support content describes common cash-game buy-ins from twenty to one hundred big blinds.
The app surfaces a competitive cash-game rake model with caps by stakes band and no rake when a hand ends preflop.
Core poker variants support the first investor demo narrative.
Tournament infrastructure is positioned as a liquidity, community, and partner-distribution lever.
The product strategy is not to teach the market a new game. It is to make existing poker feel more credible, faster, and more premium.
The game pages are not rules pages. Investors already know poker. What matters is how each format turns a technical moat into acquisition, retention, and trust.
Hold'em is the demo because it is instantly understood. Omaha is the proof of depth because hidden information is harder. Tournaments are the growth mechanic because liquidity arrives on a schedule.
Flux can critique CoinPoker, SwC, GG, and legacy poker on fee pressure, UX fatigue, and black-box trust while staying focused on its own sharper claim: every serious hand deserves evidence.
Every game format becomes a way to show that Flux can turn fairness into a player-facing experience.
A lower-rake posture creates a direct player value message against legacy and crypto poker rooms.
Invite access, agents, referrals, and events can concentrate the first serious tables around high-intent players.
Hand histories, replay surfaces, and self-verify create recurring moments where the product proves itself.
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.
Familiar poker formats become the product surface for a verifiable crypto-native operating layer.
The most familiar format teaches players the verification habit.
More private cards make folded-card privacy easier to understand.
Tournaments and creator rooms can concentrate attention without faking traction.
Private access lets product quality and table culture mature before scale.
Game formats are not isolated pages. They are adoption surfaces for the same proof architecture.