World Series of Poker Review

Options for poker games on the Cube are scant at best, but even so, the merely competent opponent AI and middling career mode aren't enough to make this version worth your while.

The World Series of Poker is...well, the World Series of poker tournaments. The multiday, multistaged tournament of all- comers in the poker world, be they pro or amateur, is the grandest of grand poker events, culminating in a several-days-long main event where thousands of players test their Texas hold 'em skills with the hope of taking home the bracelet and millions of dollars in cash winnings. But you wouldn't know any of this by playing Activision Value's game take on the World Series. World Series of Poker lacks the grandiose presentation and scale of the real-life tournament, featuring only a handful of familiar poker faces, largely ugly visuals, and barely anything that really feels like the real-life World Series. However, purely judged as a console poker game, it gets a few things right. Still, with a license as big as the World Series, you'd hope for something more than a marginal poker game.

Sure, it's got some pros, but what kind of a World Series is this without Johnny Chan?!?
Sure, it's got some pros, but what kind of a World Series is this without Johnny Chan?!?

Games included in the World Series of Poker package are Omaha, Omaha hi-low split, seven card stud, seven card stud hi-low split, razz (seven stud lowball), and, of course, the Cadillac of poker itself, Texas hold 'em. The bulk of the single-player experience comes from the career mode, where you're given the opportunity to create your own poker persona through some rudimentary but decently varied facial and attire editing tools. Give your player some intimidating sunglasses, a goofy beard, a gold lamé suit, or whatever suits your fancy. After that, you're given $10,000 and sent into the lion's den. With that money, you can begin buying your way into any of the ancillary WSOP tournaments to build your bankroll, or you can just dive headfirst into the main event. Oddly enough, you will still have to complete almost all of the side tournaments before you can move on into the next year of your career, even if you finish the main event.

The progression of the career is a bit stagnant but not altogether bad. The main problem with it is that everything you do feels fundamentally the same. Whether you're in a $1,500 razz tournament or the main event, the presentation and feel of the game never really changes. There are a few invitational tournaments you can check out where you'll play against mostly pro players, but even they don't break up the monotony very well. Not to mention that the game boasts only a small number of real-life pro players, such as Chris "Jesus" Ferguson, Scotty Nguyen, Men "The Master" Nguyen, John Phan, and Max Pescatori--and none of them display their trademark personalities in the game. In fact, they pretty much act like raving lunatics the whole time, wildly gesticulating in ways that would embarrass Mattias "The Screaming Swede" Anderson. Even a few of Scotty Nguyen's trademark jabs would have been wholly welcome. Oh, well.

Thankfully, the game itself plays pretty well. The artificial intelligence is pretty up to speed, and you'll see plenty of players act differently from one another. Some play more aggressively, trying to bully you with their chip stacks, and others prefer the Dan Harrington approach, playing it tightly and waiting for big hands to go in for the kill. Most times, your opponents seem to know when to bow out and when to strike, though there are occasions where the CPU players will put way too much stock in draw hands, only to end up getting burned. Then again, most poker players are guilty of letting pretty-looking flush and straight draws get the best of them at least one time or another, so there are far worse flaws to suffer from.

Whereas the Xbox and PlayStation 2 versions of World Series of Poker feature online play, the GameCube version sadly--though also predictably--does not. As we've said, the AI is reasonably solid, but the online play was one of the biggest reasons to pick up the other console versions of the game. Without it, World Series of Poker is a decidedly less appealing game.

World Series of Poker really falls short in the graphics and audio categories. The character models aren't very well put together, with blocky builds, goofy-looking faces, and animations that couldn't be more wildly out of place. Everybody swings their arms about in herky-jerky manners when they win or makes melodramatic "sad" faces when they lose. It's all so cartoonish and weird, and it just doesn't belong in a licensed product like this one. Not to mention that the game has just about the worst card-flopping animation in history. Fortunately, the basic interface that shows you your cards and the deal is quite good, and it even displays your folded hand over the rest of the hand so you can see what you might have had, as well as those fun little percentage markers that denote how much of a shot you have at winning during an all-in hand. Plus, you can skip quickly through cutscenes of players sitting there thinking about their hands if you like (except, for some reason, during Omaha games.) The GameCube version really looks no different from the Xbox or PS2 games, so at least you aren't losing out on graphical quality here (modest as it may be).

Insert “Rounders” quote here.
Insert “Rounders” quote here.

Official WSOP commentator Lon McEachern lends his voice to the proceedings, but his usual sidekick, Norman Chad, is nowhere to be found. As grating as Chad is during the TV broadcasts, his brand of painful self-denigrating humor would be vastly more welcome than the schlub who replaces him here. McEachern himself is bad enough; he's only got around a dozen or so canned comments, none of which provide any real insight. The rest of the audio doesn't consist of much more than the flips of cards, clatters of chips, and what have you.

With its lack of online play, World Series of Poker on the GameCube is much tougher to recommend than the Xbox or PlayStation 2 versions. Admittedly, options for poker games on the Cube are scant at best, but even so, the merely competent opponent AI and middling career mode aren't enough to make this version worth your while.

The Good

  • Solid opponent AI
  • Scotty Nguyen is in it

The Bad

  • Ugly graphics
  • Bad commentary
  • Fails to capture the pageantry of the World Series events
  • Pro players are badly represented
  • Career mode has somewhat of a pointless feel to it after a while

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