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The Best Video Games of 2020 (so far)

2020 has been a challenging year for all of us, but if we are to take any kind of light in the situation, we are halfway through it. Video games, alike everything else in the world, are in questionable situations. On one hand, the next generation of consoles are set to launch this year, but on the other, development and production teams are dealing with brand new challenges.

For as tumultuous a year that 2020 has been, there have been great games released. It is a little early to crown one as “Game of the Year” yet, but that doesn’t mean we can’t look back on the best experiences we have played so far. In no particular order, here are the best video games of 2020 (so far).

The Last of Us Part II

The Last of Us Part 2 is a profound and harrowing sequel - CNET

Easily the most controversial game of 2020 so far, it seemed whoever played the highly anticipated sequel to 2013’s The Last of Us either thought it was a masterpiece, or they absolutely hated it. We found ourselves somewhere in the middle as you can tell by our article focused on where the game fails and succeeds. Focusing on its successes, The Last of Us Part 2 is unquestionably one of the best animated games ever with a beautiful landscape, and another dark, gripping tale.

Final Fantasy VII Remake

FF7 Remake Materia guide - Polygon

Announced at E3 2015, Square Enix pulled its common move of making fans wait years for a highly anticipated game. The wait seems to have been worth it. The Final Fantasy VII remake has been broken up into multiple parts and this game focuses on the Midgar section of the iconic 1997 game. They changed the gameplay to a more action RPG style and dove deep into the environment and storytelling opportunities that were missed the first time. While there is more on the way, the part one sample here is a great starting point that many will be excited to see continued.

Doom Eternal

DOOM ETERNAL Playing As Revenant DEMON Gameplay Walkthrough [4K ...

Following up from the amazing return of Doom in 2016, Doom Eternal took ripping and tearing to a new level. The Doom Slayer returns to Earth absolutely invaded by demons and will gun his way through all of Hell’s armies to save humanity. Brand new movement abilities and weapons were added that all feel at home and just as smooth as they did in the 2016 game. No gunplay in 2020 even comes close to the feeling of Doom Eternal so far.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons

Animal Crossing: The First Summer Update Is Now Live - GameSpot

Animal Crossing: New Horizons will go down as one of the most important video game releases ever because of it coming out near the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic. Everyone was playing it and it received tremendous praise for its relaxing atmosphere and bringing the beloved series to the Nintendo Switch. They have continued putting out regular updates that brings more things for you to do and waste time. It still has some issues, but the impact Animal Crossing: New Horizons has made on our lives this year is immeasurable.

Ori and the Will of the Wisps

Ori and the Will of the Wisps on Steam

Ori and the Will of the Wisps is an amazing followup to Moon Studios’ debut title, Ori and the Blind Forest. The 2D Meteoidvania expanded its gameplay and improved on many aspects that were not even that big of issues in the first game. The music is again orchestrated by Gareth Coker who again delivers a gripping, emotional soundtrack to go along with the gorgeous environments and story that will have you in the feels.

Half-Life: Alyx

Half-Life: Alyx

For the first time in well over a decade, Valve released a Half-Life game. While it may not be the Half-Life 3 people are holding out hope for, Half-Life: Alyx is arguably the greatest virtual reality game made yet. While Valve might not make games regularly anymore, they showed they are still capable of making top of the line experiences. In the case of this VR titles, things feel fluid, the creepy atmosphere is welcomed, and the story set before Half-Life 2, while not moving the story forward, at least brings fans back to that world.

First Time Skydiver and Veteran Instructor Die in Skydiving Accident

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18 year old Jeanna Triplicata and her Grandma, Renee Sands, decided on the spur of the moment to go skydiving in Georgia. Her mom posted on Facebook today, “Tragically we lost our oldest daughter today.” Jeanna and the tandem instructor, Nick Esposito suffered a parachute malfunction and were killed during the dive. Jeanna had just graduated high school and her parents say that she was not a general “thrill seeker.” She wanted to become a High School English teacher. Nick, 35, who has been skydiving for almost 10 years leaves behind a wife. There is an ongoing investigation to determine the fault in the parachute malfunction.

Read more on the story here

Jeanna’s father says he will miss being her father every day

Roads in Utah and Georgia can now talk to each other

Debate over masks gets heated between Georgia mayor and governor

Sex crime allegations against Ahmaud Arbery murder suspect are being investigated

Vaccine Protestors Appear to be Growing in Number

There is a general consensus that normal will not return until a coronavirus vaccine has been released. The problem is that there seems to be an increasing population of people who don’t trust this upcoming vaccine. Anti-vaccination has become increasingly normalized in America and now with the politicization of the mask debate and the management of the COVID-19 pandemic some are questioning the validity and safety of the upcoming vaccine. Edith Perry, of the Maryland Community Research Advisory Board said, “It’s hard to trust that they’re looking out for our well-being,” he continued. “Me, I’m very skeptical about that shot. I have my popcorn and my soda and I’m just watching it very carefully.”

Read more on the story here

British Scientists say “no normality until vaccine”

India has begun testing a vaccine

Will we be able to tell if the vaccine is working?

Jim Cramer gives advice on how to invest in the vaccine

 

Georgia Governor Blocks Local Government Mask Mandates

Governor Brian Kemp of Georgia has refused to mandate mask wearing in the state , but now he has taken it one step farther. “Previous executive orders – and now this order – state no local action can be more or less restrictive than ours. We have explained that local mask mandates are unenforceable,” tweeted spokesperson Candace Broce. To clarify, that means that if a mayor wants to mandate mask wearing in his city, that is against the law.

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson responded on Twitter, saying “It is officially official. Governor Kemp does not give a damn about us.”

Kemp was one of the first to relax restrictions and cases have been steadily rising since June.

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See how local government is responding

Georgia high schools begin to allow football helmets

Trump is visiting Georgia today

The Georgia Lottery has donated a record $1.2 million to education

 

Redskins Confirm That Name Change Will Happen

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After 87 years the Redskins have announced that they will be retiring the team name and mascot. This change comes after a recent wave of pressure from sponsors and decades of protests from Native American communities. The Washington Redskins will be the first team to change its name since the mid 1990’s, and may include a location change as well. The mayor of Washington DC would like the team to actually play in the district. “The Washington football team should be playing in Washington,” said Muriel Bowser. The new name has not yet been determined, but is anxiously awaited by fans and rivals alike.

Read more on the story here

What are some possible new names?

“Redskins” is not the only problematic NFL name

Will the Texas Rangers be the next to change their name?

New name for Washington Redskins embroiled in trademark issues

Twitter Accounts of Elon Musk, Joe Biden, Kanye West and More Were Hacked

Dozens of verified accounts on Twitter were hacked yesterday. Tweets were sent out on the accounts of Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Apple, Uber and several others that pushed a BitCoin scam. The initial tweet on Musk’s account said, “I‘m feeling generous because of Covid-19. I’ll double any BTC payment sent to my BTC address for the next hour. Good luck, and stay safe out there!” and was followed by a BitCoin wallet address. As quickly as the posts were deleted new ones popped up. Twitter took unprecedented action and blocked verified accounts from posting, also restricting password and other account changes. As of 8:30 PM on Wednesday, July 15th, it appears the hack has been contained.

Read more on the story here

Are the hackers really making money?

How did twitter respond?

For a list of the tweets sent out click here

Twitter stock dipped due to today’s hack

 

ICE Rolls Back on Policy Regarding Foreign Students

There was a massive outcry when ICE and the Trump Administration set in place a policy that would rescind student visas for international students. The ban stated that unless there were in-person classes to take, the international students would have to leave the country. This was immediately met with lawsuits from Harvard and MIT. The suit stated, “These students contribute substantially to the US economy when they are resident in the United States,” the companies wrote. “Without international students, American educational institutions face a sudden loss of critical mass — jeopardizing their ability to maintain their standards of excellence.” 17 states and the District of Columbia also filed suits against the Trump Administration. The led to today, where ICE reversed the ban, allowing these students to remain in the US even if their classes are online only.

Read more on the story here

Florida’s first Historically Black college to become a university

Ole Miss has relocated their confederate statue to somewhere less prominent

Restaurant workers are facing “mask hostility” 

Promising COVID-19 vaccine in Atlanta

 

Hong Kong’s New Reality: Autonomy Ravished

With the passage and signing of the “Law of the People’s Republic of China on Safeguarding National Security in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region”, or Hong Kong National Security Law on 30 June 2020, “one country, two systems” is moribund. It is a devastating blow to protestors, foreign governments, and people who support Hong Kong independence. After more than a year of unrest in the enclave, the Communist Party of China has finally done what many around the world expected them to do – crack down forcefully and without reservation on the civil unrest and disobedience.

Hong Kong autonomy was promised until 2047 (50 years after the U.K. handover), but the actions taken over the past year by anti-government forces, perceived as radical behavior by the Chinese government, destroyed what precious little time was left for them and their cherished system.

The four crimes of subversion, terrorism, secession, and collusion with foreign forces are at the heart of this legislation. Anyone convicted under these offenses will face a minimum of three years in prison with the maximum penalty being life in prison. Hong Kong’s judicial system is now absolutely deferential to the one used on the mainland. Chinese security and intelligence agents operating in Hong Kong are not liable to criminal prosecution and have de facto immunity. Another key aspect is that damage of any kind to any and all transport facilities will be considered an offense of terrorism and will be punished as such. This piece of the law is without a doubt in response to the widespread shutting down and destruction of MTR property. No longer will anti-government forces be able to grind the city to a standstill and hold its residents hostage.

Observers around the world are asking what this new law is and what does it mean not just for Hong Kong, but for the global community. The answer is quite simple, interference in the domestic affairs of a sovereign state will be punished severely.

A notable occurrence during the protests and riots of the previous year was the participation of foreign students, residents, and tourists. Under Article 38 of the Security Law, foreigners can be arrested, detained, and convicted for subversion and/or terrorism. It doesn’t matter whether they are living abroad and participating in such activities, as soon as they enter Hong Kong territory, they are subject to the law. This provision is what really distresses foreign powers and causes them to criticize what they claim is an assault on liberty.

Is it though?

In what nation on Earth are foreign citizens given free rein to join anti-government activities that have as their aim secession? Activities that have caused incalculable economic damage through property destruction and capital flight. Imagine Chinese tourists and students looting and throwing Molotov cocktails during Black Lives Matter protests in New York City.

International reaction from the United Kingdom, the United States, and the Republic of China (Taiwan) was critical. The U.K. has stated its intention to pursue a path that would eventually grant British citizenship to 3 million Hong Kongers born before 1997. For its part, the United States has seen the creation of bills that would provide refugee status for Hong Kong residents. Taiwan has offered promises of vague “humanitarian assistance.” Regardless of what the outside world decides, the People’s Republic of China has already determined its response by passing and signing this bill one day before the 1 July 1997 handover: colonialism is finished and no one will dictate what shape governance will take in united and sovereign China.

Season Or No Season, MLB Made This Worse Than It Should Have Been

In addition to bringing the entire planet to a standstill, the COVID-19 crisis tore off the flimsy veneer of civility between sports owners and players, not that it ever existed to any great extent in the first place. The primary example of how focused owners are on the bottom line at the expense of player health has been with Major League Baseball. While the NBA and NHL have acquitted themselves well for the most part, MLB has replaced the NFL as epitomizing the attitude of, “The players? Who cares what they think?”

It’s a business relationship. Sure, there are owners who care about baseball employees – including players – more than others, but most treat them as cogs in their vast organizational labyrinth. Sports ownership might be more enjoyable than being a “Master of the Universe” in the world of high finance. It garners more public attention since there are relatively few people who own sports franchises and a seemingly endless conveyor belt of faceless, nameless replicants in the financial sector. But in the end, it’s another division of their business. Some treat it as a plaything; others want to be the owner holding up a trophy they would never hold based on athletic skill or as the architect of a championship team even if they believe they could have and would have on both counts.

To categorize the owners as inherently evil is easy and somewhat inaccurate. Given the amount of money at stake, it’s entirely understandable that they would want some form of a season no matter how diluted it is. Public lambasting is the price to mitigate some of the television and advertising money they were set to lose, the ticket refunds and lost revenue from the games themselves, and their reluctant decision to pay minor leaguers and team and stadium employees not to work. Given the situation, concessions are in order and they go beyond player safety. Still, they are charging an obscene amount for the MLB package at $59.99 for 60 games and maintaining blackout restrictions.

In the end, it’s a business. It’s always a business. The owners happen to be billionaires, but billionaires are rarely in the habit of giving money away, kowtowing to their employees, or admitting they’re wrong about anything. This is true whether they open the books and prove their cries of poverty that led to demands that the players prorate their salaries and concede to the radical changes Commissioner Rob Manfred and the owners ended up unilaterally implementing anyway. There could be a zombie apocalypse and the owners would still try to accrue as much cash as possible by gouging fans while dismissing the contributions of the players as if the owners are the game and the fans and players merely background scenery like a bush in a Bob Ross painting.

If the season takes place – still a major “if” given the fluid nature of the virus and how it is again resulting in the shutdown of entire states – there’s a very real chance that it will be stopped without warning and the term “wait till next year” will take on an entirely new meaning.

Some have looked at South Korea and how they are playing their games with few unforeseen obstacles and wondered why the U.S. could not replicate how they handled it. But “how they handled it” is the key. In South Korea, the citizens were willing to listen to medical professionals and the government to address the virus. There was a plan, not a random set of denials that there was a problem, demands to reopen, groups of people who see conspiracy theories and infringements on freedom with the mandating of wearing masks for their own good. People in South Korea did not take the lead of a government that was using a strategy of “ignore the problem and it will go away” knowing that is not a solution. Admittedly, South Korea is much smaller than North America and this too contributed to the virus being sufficiently contained that regular activities could take place within certain parameters, but the lack of an effective and cohesive government response undoubtedly contributed to the current crisis and inability to play professional sports.

The owners are predominately to blame for their own social experiment in what not to do. Bungling on a smaller scale than what was done nationally is still a bungling. The players, however, do bear responsibility for failing to realize that the owners would use the March 26 agreement against them; for believing that the owners would not exploit their naïveté to suit their own ends of getting players on the field and recouping a portion of their lost revenue. This is a recurring theme with players in any negotiation from the collective bargaining agreement to the protocol during such an unexpected event like a global pandemic.

Allowing the players to opt out of playing is not something owners are accustomed to. Worker bees work. That’s the hierarchy. However, players who objected to placing themselves and their families in harm’s way held the hammer of public opinion, especially since finances were not an issue for the ones who have chosen to opt out. It is not a situation where the players who opt out of playing are still getting their salary. The partial list of players who have chosen not to play (Ryan Zimmerman, Ian Desmond, Mike Leake, Nick Markakis, Buster Posey) or are mulling it (Mike Trout) are big names who have earned big money. The list of players who have little choice but to play because they need the income and/or do not want to incur disfavor in the organization is expansive. The rosters could end up looking like those of the 1995 replacement players in spring training. For a few, this crisis breeds opportunity in that they will get a look in the majors they otherwise might not have. The changes that have been made with the DH coming to the National League and expanded playoffs pale in comparison to what the game itself will look like under these circumstances, if there is a season at all.

Brazilian President Catches Coronavirus; Wife and Daughters Test Negative

After months of refusing to lock down the country in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has tested positive for the disease. In the past Bolsonaro has refused to wear a mask, social distance or isolate in any form. This week sees him in isolation, wearing a mask, and social distancing. He is also taking Hydroxychloroquine, a controversial treatment for the coronavirus that has been pulled from trials in the United States. His wife and daughters have tested negative. Brazil has a reported 71,500 deaths from the coronavirus, trailing only the USA. It is also on it’s third health minister since the initial outbreak.

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Mother-in-Law of Bolsonaro in the hospital due to coronavirus

COVID-19 is decimating the indigenous population

The “New Normal” in Brazil

British population still refusing to wear masks