Posted August 18, 2025 by celloloops
The visual update was sparked by The Great Gatsby movie ...which ironically I have not seen. But its promo posters sent me down the Art Deco rabbit hole. If you’d like the backstory, read on. Otherwise, grab the demo and let me know what you think.
Cheers in advance!
I loved ivoryred’s pixel poker cards, but readability was becoming an issue—especially with angled cards. I also wanted Overtrick to stand out with a stronger visual identity.
I grew up in New York City, surrounded by the Chrysler Building and Rockefeller Plaza, so the geometric drama of Art Deco has always stuck with me. Since my main tool is Inkscape (an open-source vector program), sharp Deco lines felt like a natural fit.
The search for Deco fonts led me straight to the Gatsby promos. The title font, Atlas, isn’t free, but Limelight gets pretty close. Just swapping in that font gave the cards a bold, distinctive character. For everything else, I went with Nunito for clarity.
Bridge platforms like BBO and IntoBridge were huge inspirations here. I:
The result: easier to read, more visually consistent, and a lot more personality.
Previously, the special cards looked nice, but the images didn’t relate to what the cards actually did. I finally sat down, powered through all 12 designs in one session, and gave them:
There’s still some pixelation to clean up, but usability is miles better. Now it’s also clear which special cards are playable at any given time.
This one was a happy accident. I found a bug where East was treating West (its partner) as an opponent, which made East throw away high cards constantly. Fixing that turned Overtrick from “pretty chill” to “oh wow this is tough.”
The game is now a lot more challenging—and that difficulty opens the door for special cards to really shine.
I’d love to hear what you think