Activision-Blizzard Donates $2 Million to Help Veterans Employment Impacted by Coronavirus

Activision Blizzard announced that it donated $2 million to help veterans find high-quality jobs through its Call of Duty Endowment program. Activision also released a new “Fearless” in-game content pack for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare with 100% of proceeds going towards the endowment.

The Call of Duty Endowment is Activision-Blizzard’s long-running program helping raise funds for veteran needs. The timing of this month’s donation is also part of National Military Appreciation Month and there’s a social media campaign asking for followers to post photos or names of veterans with the hashtag #CODEFearlessChallenge.

[widget path=”global/article/imagegallery” parameters=”albumSlug=every-ign-call-of-duty-review&captions=true”]

“Military veterans need our support more than ever. With unemployment rates at all-time highs, we know from past experiences that veterans will be far more affected than ordinary citizens,” Activision-Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick said in a statement. “With this donation to the Call of Duty Endowment, we hope to find jobs for at least 4,000 veterans.”

Unemployment has grown multi-fold since the outbreak of COVID-19 aka the novel coronavirus. As businesses close due to the ongoing shelter-in-place order and public spaces become restricted due to the highly contagious nature of the virus, employees have seen their work hours reduced or eliminated.

[ignvideo url=”https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/03/09/call-of-duty-warzone-official-trailer”]

“We’ve seen a huge increase in veterans asking our partners for assistance since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said executive director of the Call of Duty Endowment Dan Goldenberg. “We’ve been committed to helping veterans find meaningful employment for over 10 years, but we’ve never seen anything like this.”

For more information on COVID-19 check out our guide on how to stay safe during the pandemic.

[poilib element=”accentDivider”]

Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN.

The Best Ways to Play Board Games Online

Even at the best of times, it can be hard to schedule games. You need to find one, and often more, like-minded people who want to play the same thing at the same time. No wonder a lot of games sit on shelves, seeing way less action than their owners would like. Being in the middle of a global health crisis is, of course, about the worst of times when it comes to scheduling games.

Given this issue, then, it’s lucky that designers and developers have come up with all sorts of ways to get your game on digitally. From live play with voice chat in dedicated software to sedate play-by-email games in your browser, there’s a huge array of options with a huge array of games. Many of them are free, too, or at least cheap.

Here’s a rundown of the biggest and best options for digital board gaming. Take your choice–or choices –and get back to gaming.

Tabletop Simulator

[poilib element=”commerceCta” json=”%7B%22image%22%3A%7B%22url%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fassets1.ignimgs.com%2F2020%2F04%2F28%2Ftabletop-simulator1588107352114.jpeg%22%2C%22styleUrl%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fassets1.ignimgs.com%2F2020%2F04%2F28%2Ftabletop-simulator1588107352114_%7Bsize%7D.jpeg%22%2C%22id%22%3A%225ea8985ce4b0cb6495c436e4%22%7D%2C%22url%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fr.zdbb.net%2Fu%2Fbtl9%22%2C%22title%22%3A%22Tabletop%20Simulator%22%2C%22store%22%3A%22Humble%20Store%22%2C%22additionalInfo%22%3A%22%22%2C%22ourPick%22%3Afalse%7D”]

This commercial Steam title does exactly what the title suggests: it’s a real-time sandbox for creating and playing all manner of tabletop games. New users may find the third-person view and real-world controls disorientating: you have to pick up dice and flick them with the mouse. But you get used to it, and together with text and voice chat, it makes it easy to simulate games of every kind. Pay once for the Steam title and there’s a dizzying library of free game modules to enjoy, plus a large, active community to play with. Tabletop Simulator does not enforce rules, so you’ll need to know how to play whatever you try.

Tabletopia

tabletopia

Tabletopia also has a Steam version, and an app for mobile platforms too. But they’re free and you don’t need them as you can play directly in your browser. You can pay a subscription to upgrade your account to silver or gold, which gets you access to premium games and lets you have more games running at once. It’s focused on real-time games, which is unfortunate for users who want to play by email because the game interfaces are uniformly excellent, clean, and modern, while enforcing rules in-game.

Boardgamearena

boardgamemania

Starting out as a place to play live games, Board Game Arena has added support for turn-based play by email and become very popular. It has a big list of games, it’s easy to find opponents, and the interfaces are often very good. To set up matches of some of the more recent titles like Sushi Go and Kingdomino, you’ll need to pay a small fee to get a premium account. That will also let you log on when the site is very busy, which it often is in the early evenings, European time. But you can join a match of any game without premium.

Yucata

yucata

Yucata is one of the older board gaming websites around and it shows from the site design. It can be hard to create and find matches and invitations at first. But don’t let that fool you: it has a big library of play-by-email games that is still growing, and the in-game experience is often excellent. Use the “Games” menu, pick “Invitation List” and use the plethora of filters to find games waiting for players. You can find a list of all the titles available under “Games”, “Game Information”. There are some hidden gems to check out like Automobiles and A Few Acres of Snow.

Boiteajeux

boit

This is a French site, but you can switch the language options with the flags in the top right. Among the options on offer are an impressive number of heavy strategy games including Tzol’kin and Alchemists. Like Yucata, the interfaces for a lot of these games are a bit dated, but they’re perfectly playable. You can join games waiting for players in the “waiting room” and there’s normally plenty to choose from.

Vassal

vassal

You’ll need to put in a bit of effort to get Vassal up and running, but it’s worth it if you like longer strategy games, particularly military simulations. It’s a Java-based client so you’ll need to install the runtime then download Vassal itself, then download modules for the games you want to play. It doesn’t have a lobby as such, it’s more for arranging matches with friends, but you can play live or swap play by email files as you prefer.

BrettSpielWelt

brett

If you’re happy installing Java for Vassal, you might also want to have a look at BSW. It’s a German-based service for playing live games online. Web-based play needs Java, but you can avoid it by downloading and installing a client from the site instead. It’s also quite confusing to get set up and playing, all the more so because everything is in German. If you can make the effort, though, it has a huge library of games, including some excellent titles like Imperial that you won’t find anywhere else. It also has a fun community leveling and “township” system.

Custom Apps

A lot of publishers have made digital versions of their games available, often on multiple platforms, both desktop and mobile. You have to buy them, of course, but for the money, you often get the best, smoothest play experience possible. Rules are enforced, tutorials show you how to play and there are solid solo and AI-based options to enjoy.

There are too many of these to list individually, so instead here are a few of our favorites. Galaxy Trucker ought not to work on digital at all but is brilliant with a solo campaign and a whole new game mode unique to this version. Jaipur also boasts a solitaire campaign and is brilliant for bursts of two-player fun. Crossover classic Ticket to Ride works really well online, with fast, exciting matches. Finally, newcomer Sagrada is a delightful dice-drafting game with a beautiful stained glass aesthetic.

Others

There are a very large number of smaller or more niche services you can check out if you want to play particular games. Happy Meeple has a slew of two-player titles to enjoy and makes it easy to get up and running. Spiel By Web is an old-school site for turn-based play with some games not found elsewhere, such as Wallenstein. For military game fans, Wargameroom offers custom-built, bare-bones clients for real-time play of a bunch of card-driven wargames. Board Space is an app-based service with a lot of abstracts, including the entire GIPF project. There are many others just a Google away, but they tend to have smaller collections and weak interfaces.

[poilib element=”accentDivider”]

Disclosure: Humble Bundle is owned by Ziff Davis, the parent company of IGN. Humble Bundle and IGN operate completely independently, and no special consideration is given to Humble Bundle announcements or promotions for coverage.

Binge It! Clone High Is the Funniest High School Comedy You’ve (Probably) Never Seen

Clone High is available to stream on MTV’s website and can also be purchased on sites like Amazon, iTunes and Google Play.

[poilib element=”accentDivider”]

“Remember when MTV used to be good?” That’s a common refrain for a lot of ’80s and ’90s kids who still yearn for the days when the cable network was about more than just trashy reality TV. You can argue about the exact point at which MTV fully crossed over the the dark side, but the network definitely hit the point of no return when it canceled Clone High. That series ranks among the best animated sitcoms of the early 21st century, even if far too few people discovered it during its short life.

Binge It! The Venture Bros. Is a Smorgasbord of Pop Culture Hilarity

The premise of Clone High is pretty simple and aptly summed up by the show’s catchy theme song – “Way, way back in the 1980s, secret government employees dug up famous guys and ladies and made amusing genetic copies. Now their clones are sexy teens. Now they’re gonna make it if they try.” Basically, it’s your textbook high school comedy, if said high school were home to clones of dead historical figures and secretly run by a sinister government organization bent on harnessing their military potential. Oh, and the principal is a power-mad supervillain with a cardigan-clad, robotic assistant named Mr. Butlertron.

clone-highClone High brilliantly mashes up all the expected teen comedy/drama tropes with your favorite historical figures. Abe Lincoln (Will Forte) is a lanky, awkward everyman who’s best friends with hyperactive party animal Mahatma Gandhi (Michael McDonald) and moody Goth loner Joan of Arc (Nicole Sullivan). Abe pines after the lovely Cleopatra Smith (Christa Miller) while failing to acknowledge Joan’s unrequited love. JFK (Christopher Miller), whose accent is apparently genetically inherited, is the school’s designated handsome but brain-dead jock. Over the course of the show’s single 13-episode season, these teens deal with everything from school elections to standardized test prep to a seemingly endless series of proms, all while struggling to live up to the impossible standards set by their genetic predecessors.

In addition to having a really great premise and easy hook, the series benefits from being overseen by a real comedy dream team. Clone High was created by future LEGO Movie/21 Jump Street masterminds Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence (hence why most of the show’s incidental characters are voiced by Scrubs alums like Donald Faison and Neil Flynn). If you’ll pardon the pun, you can really sense the DNA of Clone High in Lord and Miller’s later work – that same emphasis on pushing a simple idea to the most comedically extreme places.

That’s where the show’s brilliance lies. Even when the show tackles a tried and true concept, like an election for class president, it winds up with a ridiculous scenario where Abe becomes the unwitting spokesman for predatory junk food peddler X-Stream Blu (mad-packed with all nine essential nutramites to fortify your X-Zone!) and Marilyn Manson steps in to sing about the importance of the Food Pyramid. Later episodes feature everything from a rock opera spawned by a new raisin-smoking craze to Gandhi and George Washington Carver teaming up for a buddy cop movie called Brown & Tan. The show is ridiculous in the best way, yet it’s just earnest enough that the character drama still carries weight.

[widget path=”global/article/imagegallery” parameters=”albumSlug=11-animated-sitcoms-that-need-a-revival&captions=true”]

Clone High’s one great flaw is that it never got a proper conclusion. MTV canceled the series after one season, robbing fans of any resolution to the show’s cliffhanger ending. The cancellation came in part because many Indians were less than thrilled with Gandhi’s depiction. But in a time when networks and streaming services are constantly hunting for more content and everything from Invader Zim to Star Wars: The Clone Wars has been given a new lease on life, maybe there’s still hope for a Clone High revival. Hilariously dated celebrity cameos aside, that one season still feels as fresh in 2020 as it did in 2002.

More From Binge It!…

[poilib element=”accentDivider”]

Binge It! is IGN’s recommendation series. Movies, TV shows, books, comics, music… if you can binge it, we’re here to talk about it. In each installment of Binge It!, we’ll discuss a piece of content we’re passionate about — and why you should check it out.