What Is Triple Combo?
Triple Combo is a quick, browser-based card game that uses a standard 52-card poker deck. The goal is simple: form strong poker-style hands—like three-of-a-kind, flushes, or straights—across a series of rounds. Each round gives you a handful of cards, and you decide which combos to keep and which to discard. It plays fast, runs in any browser, and requires nothing more than a left-click or tap.
No download, no sign-up, just cards and a score. It’s the kind of game you play while waiting for something else to load, or when you want a few minutes of low-stakes decision-making.
How the Rounds Work
Each round starts with a set of cards dealt face-up. You can pick and choose which cards to hold, then the rest are replaced. After the draw, the game scores your best hand. The better the hand, the higher the points. You play multiple rounds, and your total score adds up.

There’s no timer, no opponent—just you and the deck. The game rewards smart choices, not speed. You can take your time deciding which cards to keep. But here’s the thing: sometimes a so-so hand now is better than chasing a perfect hand and ending up with nothing.
Key Hands to Know
If you’ve played poker before, you already know most of these. But Triple Combo simplifies things. You don’t need to remember every possible hand. The main ones you’ll aim for are:
- Three-of-a-kind – Three cards of the same rank. This is the bread and butter of the game.
- Flush – Five cards of the same suit. More common than you might think.
- Straight – Five consecutive ranks (suits don’t matter). Aces can be high or low.
There are also higher hands like full houses and four-of-a-kind, but they’re rarer. Most of your score will come from those three basic combos. Don’t ignore a pair—it may not score much, but it’s a foundation to build on.

Practical Tips for New Players
The biggest mistake I see new players make is throwing away a decent hand to chase a better one. For example, if you have two cards to a flush and three random cards, it’s often smarter to keep the flush draw than to dump everything and hope for a straight. A partial hand is still a path to points.
Another tip: pay attention to the rank distribution. If you see three Kings left in the deck, you know a three-of-a-kind is possible. But don’t get married to a single strategy. The game has a bit of randomness, so sometimes you just have to take what you get and move on.
Finally, don’t overthink it. Triple Combo is not a deep strategy game. It’s a casual puzzle with cards. The fun comes from seeing if your gamble pays off. If you try to play it like competitive poker, you’ll miss the point.

Who Is This Game For?
Honestly, Triple Combo is great for anyone who likes quick, low-pressure card games. It’s not for people who want complex mechanics or hours of progression. It’s for the player who enjoys a few rounds of “what if I keep these two cards?” and then moves on.
It can feel repetitive after ten or fifteen minutes—there’s no real narrative or unlock system. But that’s also its strength. You pick it up, play a few rounds, and put it down. No commitment. If you liked old-school solitaire or simple poker games, this will click.
One Thing That Stands Out
What I appreciate about Triple Combo is how it doesn’t pretend to be more than it is. There’s no loot box, no timer pressure, no daily quest. It’s a clean, honest card game. In a world where every browser game wants you to watch an ad or grind for coins, Triple Combo feels refreshingly straightforward. You click, you choose, you score. That’s it. And sometimes, that’s exactly what you want.