Beverly exposes Riker’s poker bluff
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Data deals cards, highlighting the specific cards dealt to each player, setting the stage for the poker game and Beverly's eventual win.
Beverly, with a pair of queens, makes an initial bet, escalating the tension in the game and setting up Riker's later bluff.
Riker raises the stakes significantly, bluffing aggressively, while Worf and Data fold, leaving Beverly to decide whether to call his bluff; this creates suspense around whether she will risk losing.
Beverly, trusting her intuition, calls Riker's bluff, risking her chips; Riker is defeated when she reveals the strength of her read and he must concede the pot.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Analytical and detached, with a hint of curiosity about human risk-taking behavior.
Data deals the cards with mechanical precision, calling each hand with clinical accuracy ('A pair of 'ladies' for the Doctor'). He matches bets early but folds when the stakes rise ('Too rich for my blood'), acknowledging the human tendency to take risks. His observations—noting Worf's discomfort and Beverly's strong hand—serve as neutral commentary, grounding the scene in logic. Though he doesn't win, his role as dealer ensures the game's fairness, and his departure from the betting round highlights the escalating tension among the remaining players.
- • To facilitate the poker game fairly and efficiently
- • To observe and learn from the crew's reactions under pressure
- • High-stakes gambling is illogical but reveals interesting human behaviors
- • His role as dealer requires impartiality, even when others take risks
Initially overconfident, then amused but slightly embarrassed when his bluff is exposed, finally playful as he engages in banter with Beverly.
Riker sits at the poker table, his confidence waning as Beverly calls his bluff. He tosses in chips aggressively—first a fifty raise, then matching Beverly's two-hundred increase—only to reveal a losing hand when pressed. His playful banter with Beverly ('How'd you know I was bluffing?') masks his bruised ego, and her observation of his eyebrow twitch leaves him momentarily off-balance. His reaction—blanching, then laughing it off—reveals a man who prides himself on his poker face but is ultimately transparent to those who know him best.
- • To win the poker hand and assert dominance in the game
- • To maintain his reputation as a skilled bluffer among the crew
- • His poker face is unreadable, even to close colleagues like Beverly
- • High-stakes bluffing is a valid strategy to secure victory
Confident and playful during the game, then focused and professional upon receiving Ogawa's summons.
Beverly dominates the poker table with sharp intuition, calling Riker's bluff after noticing his eyebrow twitch. She raises the stakes aggressively ('Twenty. And two hundred more.') and matches Riker's final bet with confidence. Her playful teasing ('Or maybe it's the way your left eyebrow raises slightly when you bluff') reveals her enjoyment of the game and her keen observation skills. The moment is interrupted by Ogawa's comm, pulling her away to sickbay, but not before she secures her victory and leaves Riker momentarily off-balance. Her departure underscores the temporal loop's urgency, shifting the scene from leisure to crisis.
- • To win the poker hand by outmaneuvering Riker
- • To maintain her reputation as a sharp and intuitive player
- • Poker is as much about reading people as it is about the cards
- • Riker's overconfidence makes him predictable
Professionally urgent, with no visible emotional reaction.
Nurse Ogawa's voice interrupts the poker game via comm, summoning Beverly to sickbay for Geordi's dizziness. Her tone is urgent but professional, cutting through the crew's banter and redirecting Beverly's focus. Though she doesn't appear on-screen, her presence is felt as the catalyst that shifts the scene from leisure to crisis, reinforcing the temporal loop's looming threat. Her role is purely functional, but her timing is narratively pivotal.
- • To relay the medical emergency to Beverly promptly
- • To ensure Beverly responds to Geordi's condition without delay
- • Medical emergencies take priority over personal activities
- • Beverly's expertise is required to address Geordi's symptoms
Uncomfortable and skeptical, with a hint of frustration at the crew's willingness to take risks.
Worf participates reluctantly, his discomfort with the high bets evident in his grumbles and early fold ('Fifty. Fold.'). Data's remark about his lack of a strong hand ('still no help for the Klingon') bristles him, reinforcing his skepticism of Riker's hand. He studies Riker intently during the final bet, voicing his doubt ('He does not have the straight'), but ultimately folds when the stakes climb. His physical reactions—shifting uncomfortably, bristling at Data's comment—reveal his discomfort with both the game's unpredictability and the crew's casual approach to risk.
- • To avoid losing chips in a game he finds illogical
- • To call out what he perceives as Riker's bluff
- • Poker is a game of chance, not skill, and thus beneath a warrior's dignity
- • Riker's confidence in his hand is misplaced and should be challenged
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The poker table is the neutral ground where the crew's dynamics play out, serving as both a physical and symbolic space for their interactions. Data's precise dealing, Riker's bluffing, and Beverly's observation of his tell all unfold around this table, which becomes a stage for their competitive and collaborative natures. The table's centrality mirrors the crew's bond—informal yet structured, a place for both leisure and unspoken tensions. Its surface holds the cards, chips, and the weight of the moment, making it a silent witness to the game's drama.
Nurse Ogawa's combadge is the auditory bridge between the poker game and the broader crisis aboard the Enterprise. Its sudden activation—'Ogawa to Doctor Crusher. Commander La Forge needs you in sickbay.'—shatters the game's camaraderie, pulling Beverly into her professional role. The combadge's beep and Ogawa's voice serve as a narrative device, reinforcing the temporal loop's urgency and the crew's dual roles as both friends and officers. Its interruption is abrupt but narratively essential, transitioning the scene from leisure to duty.
Riker's poker deck is the central prop of the scene, dealt with precision by Data and studied intently by the players. The cards—specifically the eight, Ace, Queen, and subsequent deals—serve as the catalyst for the game's tension. Beverly's observation of Riker's tell (his eyebrow twitch) is tied to the reveal of his bluffing hand, making the deck a symbolic tool for exposing truth amid deception. The deck's randomness contrasts with Data's mechanical dealing, highlighting the human element of the game.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Riker's quarters function as an intimate, neutral ground where the crew's personal and professional dynamics intersect. The close quarters amplify the tension of the poker game, with Data's precise dealing, Riker's bluffing, and Beverly's observation of his tell all unfolding in this confined space. The room's atmosphere is one of playful rivalry, masking the underlying trust and respect among the crew. However, the interruption by Ogawa's comm shifts the mood abruptly, transforming the quarters from a sanctuary of leisure into a reminder of the looming crisis outside.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet's influence is subtly present in this scene, manifesting through the crew's professionalism, their adherence to chain of command, and the abrupt interruption of the poker game by Ogawa's summons. Though the game is a personal activity, the crew's roles as officers—Riker as first officer, Beverly as chief medical officer—are never far from the surface. The interruption reinforces Starfleet's expectation that duty takes precedence over leisure, even in the midst of a temporal crisis. The crew's dynamic, while playful, is still governed by the unspoken rules of their organization.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Picard's order to abandon ship before the Enterprise explodes leads back to the beginning of the new loop, opening with the poker game in Riker's quarters."
"Picard's order to abandon ship before the Enterprise explodes leads back to the beginning of the new loop, opening with the poker game in Riker's quarters."
Key Dialogue
"RIKER: How'd you know I was bluffing?"
"BEVERLY: I just had a feeling."
"RIKER: I guess it's better to be lucky than good."
"BEVERLY: Or maybe it's the way your left eyebrow raises slightly when you bluff."
"RIKER: Take it."