ACR Poker continues to create new services for tournament players. This time, the poker room has launched the Final Table Replays website, which lets you watch replays of final tables from major tournaments with all cards revealed. While the project is currently in beta, it already provides players with a convenient tool for analyzing the game of top regular players.
ACR Poker has launched Final Table Replays (replay.acrpoker.eu), a new platform that lets players watch tournament final table replays with every participant's cards revealed. The archive currently includes events dating back to mid-May 2026.
WPN CEO Phil Nagy announced the launch on his X account, describing it as the first version of the platform and inviting players to share feedback to help improve future updates.
This is version 1 and I am open for feedback
— Phillip Nagy (@WPN_CEO) July 15, 2026
Thank you in advancehttps://t.co/1toATW1tvx
Previously, players could only access final table replays through the corresponding tournament lobby in the poker client. Once the tournament disappeared from the lobby, its replay was no longer available. The new platform solves this issue by storing all replays in a single browser-based archive.
The service is particularly valuable for players looking to improve their MTT skills. With every player's cards revealed, users can analyze decision-making throughout each hand, review crucial spots, and gain deeper insight into opponents' strategies. The centralized replay library also makes tournament footage easier to access for coaches, content creators, and viewers.

The Final Table Replays main page is divided into two sections:
Replays can be filtered by date, player nickname, tournament name, and buy-in.
The replays fully replicate the functionality of the replayer in the ACR Poker client. Player stacks can be displayed in big blinds, and there's the option to fast-forward and increase the playback speed.
Each replay page includes:
Final Table Replays has plenty of room to evolve. One of the most practical additions would be YouTube integration, enabling automatic uploads of major tournament final tables or the creation of highlight videos featuring the most significant hands.
Another promising direction is the introduction of AI-powered analysis. AI could automatically identify the most critical hands, generate concise summaries, assess player decisions using poker mathematics, or even produce complete written recaps of tournament action.
With features like these, Final Table Replays could evolve beyond a simple replay archive into a comprehensive analysis platform for players of all levels.
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