Comparison Status checked July 12, 2026

Firepoker Alternatives: 6 Maintained Estimation Tools (2026)

· 9 MIN READ

Firepoker was a pioneer: an MIT-licensed planning poker app built on Firebase and AngularJS that thousands of teams used and dozens forked on GitHub. Its era has quietly ended — firepoker.io now redirects to firepoker.app, still serving the same AngularJS build years after that framework reached end-of-life in 2022, and the original repository lives on mainly through inactive forks. It still loads. It's just frozen — no fixes coming, no features, and a stack no one patches.

Whether you used the hosted app or self-hosted a fork, these 6 maintained tools carry the same spirit forward — including an open-source option you can still self-host.

DISCLOSURE: Online Planning Poker (ranked #1) publishes this page. The status claims above are reproducible — follow the redirect, check the forks — and all pricing was verified July 12, 2026.

The quick comparison

Tool Actively maintained Price Open source Signup
Firepoker for reference No — frozen on AngularJS Free Yes (MIT) None
Online Planning Poker Our pick Yes Free unlimited; $19/mo Business No None
Pointing Poker Yes (stable) Free (ads) No None
Scrum Poker Online Yes Free; $40/yr premium Partially None
Parabol Yes, very Free tier; $8/user/mo Yes — self-hostable Account required
Scrumpy Planning Poker Yes Free; paid Jira add-ons No None
Kollabe Yes Free tier; from $12/mo No None

What to look for in Firepoker alternatives

People stayed for three things: it was free, it was instant (paste a link, start voting), and it was open source. No single successor nails all three plus active maintenance, so decide which two you'd fight for. Free-and-instant is abundant below; open-source-and-maintained points to exactly one serious answer; and if you self-hosted for compliance reasons, that answer is where to start.

1.

Online Planning Poker

Our pick

Free-and-instant, carried forward and kept alive: create a room with no account, share the link, and estimate with unlimited players and rounds — hidden votes, Fibonacci/T-shirt/Powers-of-2/custom decks, timers, re-votes, and stats, actively developed on a modern stack. It isn't open source; the sustainability model is instead a $19/month flat Business plan (Jira two-way sync, velocity, history/CSV, team rooms, branding) that funds the free tier's upkeep — the thing the classic never had.

PROS

  • + Same instant, free, no-signup workflow
  • + Actively maintained with a real business model
  • + Grows into Jira sync and reporting if needed

CONS

  • − Closed source — no forking, no self-hosting
  • − Story-list voting works differently than the classic's
  • − Advanced features are paid

Best for: hosted-version users who want the same feel, minus the abandonment risk.

2.

Parabol

The OSS successor

If open source is the non-negotiable, Parabol is the maintained answer: a modern, actively developed open-source platform with Sprint Poker, retros, and standups, self-hostable for teams that ran their own instance for policy reasons. Hosted free tier covers 2 teams and 10 meetings/month; Team is $8 per active user.

PROS

  • + Open source AND alive — the rare combo
  • + Self-hosting fully supported
  • + Two-way Jira/GitHub/GitLab/AzDO sync

CONS

  • − Much heavier than a single-page poker app
  • − Accounts required
  • − Per-user pricing on the hosted Team plan

Best for: self-hosters and open-source purists — the philosophical heir.

3.

Pointing Poker

Survivor

From the same generation, still standing: ad-funded rather than goodwill-funded, which turned out to be the difference between "dated but running" and "frozen". Unlimited free sessions, no accounts, a retro mode, and 84+ million votes served.

PROS

  • + Proven survivor with the same zero-friction feel
  • + Free forever, uncapped
  • + No data collection

CONS

  • − Ads where the classic had none
  • − Similar-era interface
  • − Closed source

Best for: minimum change: same decade's UX, still online.

4.

Scrum Poker Online

Lightweight heir

Free, no signup, actively maintained, with QR joining and six languages; $40/year removes ads and adds a timer and auto-stats. Closest in scope to the single-purpose classic — it does voting, and only voting, well.

PROS

  • + Same minimal footprint, alive and updated
  • + Cheap optional premium
  • + Mobile-friendly with QR joining

CONS

  • − Ads on free
  • − No integrations
  • − No story-list management like the classic had

Best for: teams that used maybe 40% of the old feature set anyway.

5.

Scrumpy Planning Poker

Indie energy

The tool that most resembles what a maintained hobby-rooted project looks like today: free, no registration, async voting, joke images, and integrations with seven platforms including GitHub and GitLab. The risk profile is familiar — small team, big promises (Jira rewrite due Q3 2026) — but the commits are current.

PROS

  • + Free with genuinely useful integrations
  • + Async mode
  • + Actively developed

CONS

  • − Indie sustainability — the risk you know
  • − Humor won't suit every team
  • − Closed source despite the vibe

Best for: teams that liked small-tool character and accept small-tool risk.

6.

Kollabe

The modern take

What this category looks like when built in the 2020s: instant no-signup rooms, 10-member free tier, and a $12/month plan with Jira, GitHub, Azure DevOps, and Linear sync. No open source and no nostalgia — just a maintained product with a viable business.

PROS

  • + Modern stack, active development
  • + Cheap paid tier with real integrations
  • + Frictionless free rooms

CONS

  • − 10-member free cap
  • − Closed source
  • − Young company — bet accordingly

Best for: teams ready to stop mourning and use something current.

Frequently asked questions

Can I still self-host a fork of the classic?

Technically yes — it's MIT-licensed and forks abound. But you'd be adopting an AngularJS 1.x codebase on old Firebase APIs with no upstream. If self-hosting matters, Parabol gives you a maintained open-source codebase instead of a preserved one.

Is the hosted app safe to keep using?

It loads and votes today. The risks are quieter: an unpatched EOL framework, a redirect chain that could stop resolving any day, and zero recourse when either happens mid-sprint. Fine for a nostalgic one-off; wrong for a ceremony you run weekly.

What's the closest free replacement to how it worked?

For the create-room-share-link-vote loop: this site or Scrum Poker Online, both free with no accounts. If you used its story list heavily, Scrumpy's free tier handles story queues with integrations on top.

Redirect behavior, repository status, and prices checked July 12, 2026. If the project springs back to life, we'll happily update this page.

The same spirit, still maintained

Free unlimited rooms, no accounts, and a team actively shipping. Pick up where the classic left off.

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