AHearer, you are of course entitled to your opinion, but I think that to dismiss this one because it has a card game as its theme is somewhat analogous to dismissing a thematic cryptic because it's an homage to some musician you do not care for. As you say, it's "just another logic problem" so there's no need for you to play poker, understand poker strategy or any other aspect of the game play. You've got 48 items to place in a 6x8 grid subject to a number of constraints...that's it.
My criteria for waht makes a good mathematical puzzle are:
a) is the search space large enough where brute force, trial and error methods won't?
b) is there a good entry point?
c) Is there a logical decutive path to the solution, or at least enough so that the search space is reduced to a small enough size where you can easily try various combinations?
d) Is there some aspect of the puzzle that gives it a unique twist which enhances the difficulty.
This puzzle succeeds on all those respects.
a) There are more than 25000 possible 3-card sequences that are 'legal' here so there more than 625,000,000 sextuplets to consider for each row. That's a big search space.
b) There is definitely a clear starting point for this one that you can infer from the clues.
c) Once you get started you can figure out a path. It's hard but fair.
d) The Q=0 variation really creates an interesting challenge.
I understand that for some the math puzzles are anathema, and that they are going to take one look at this and decide to pass. Fair enough. But for those that can appreciate a well-constructed math puzzle, this one is first rate.