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Top video game releases in June 2020

The summer months are finally here, bringing with them the year’s hottest game announcements. While there is no E3 this year and most announcements will be sporadic, there are quite a few decent game launches this June. From a popular game leaving beta to a highly anticipated remake, here are the biggest game releases in June 2020.

Valorant

The 'Valorant' Beta Ends Today

Release date: June 2nd

Platform: PC

Valorant is a free-to-play first-person shooter dedicated to multiplayer gameplay and developed by Riot Games, the makers of League of Legends. The game is a hero shooter, meaning each playable character has a unique set of abilities compared to others. While just hitting its release, Valorant has been one of the most popular games in the world on streaming platforms over the last couple months during its beta.

Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics

Clubhouse Games™: 51 Worldwide Classics for Nintendo Switch ...

Release date: June 5th

Platform: Nintendo Switch

Nintendo are putting together a mega compilation of the most classic board games that have lasted hundreds of years. Chess, mancala, and more board games from across the world are included with up to four player multiplayer supported either locally or on the internet.

The Outer Worlds

The Outer Worlds

Release date: June 5th

Platform: Nintendo Switch

While originally releasing in 2019 for other platforms, The Outer Worlds is finally making its way to the Switch this month. For those who do not know, the game is made by Obsidian Entertainment, the team behind Fallout: New Vegas, South Park: The Stick of Truth, and the Pillars of Eternity franchise. The Outer Worlds is the closest we have seen to a traditional Fallout game since Fallout 4. An RPG that allows you to make choices via dialog and build a character. It also has great humor and is one of the best games from last year.

The Last of Us Part II

The Last of Us 2 Has Everyone Talking About PS Vita - Push Square

Release date: June 19th

Platform: PlayStation 4

The first Last of Us game was one of the most popular games for the PlayStation 3 both by fans and critics. The sequel takes place five years later and now 19 year old Ellie has taken full control of the series. Unless you go looking for leaks of the game on the internet, there isn’t much known about the story except that a cult has done something to Ellie and her friend. Joel will return in the series, but not much is known about how big of an impact he will have. Expect more of the same gameplay from the first game with a few tweaks here and there.

SpongeBob SquarePants: Battle for Bikini Bottom Rehydrated

SpongeBob SquarePants Battle For Bikini Bottom Rehydrated Finally ...

Release date: June 23rd

Platforms: PC, PS4, Switch, Xbox One

This cult classic SpongeBob SquarePants game released originally for the Gameboy Advance, Nintendo GameCube, PC, PlayStation 2, and Xbox in 2003. It is a 3D platformer where you play as SpongeBob, Patrick Star, and Sandy Cheeks as you fight Plankton who is trying to take control of Bikini Bottom with an army of robots. The game has been made from the ground up for modern platforms with a remastered soundtrack and some ideas cut from the original game.

Ninjala

Ninjala - Splatoon Meets ARMS on Nintendo Switch - IGN

Release date: June 24th

Platform: Nintendo Switch

Originally set to release in May, Ninjala was delayed into June because of the Coronavirus pandemic affecting development. It is a free-to-play multiplayer game where you play as a ninja who uses gum to craft weapons and fight others in an environment that allows you to run along walls. It’s a fun new idea that definitely brings Splatoon aesthetics to the fold with its art style, although it is quite different.

Thousands Gather in Tiananmen Square Despite Ban

This year marks the 31st anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre, a day that is still deeply felt in Hong Kong. This year the police banned the annual gathering, citing coronavirus concerns. In light of the recent actions of Beijing against the city, however, many believe the move to be political as Hong Kong has had steadily decreasing numbers of virus cases. Unsurprisingly this ban did not deter thousands from showing up at the usual site, armed with flags, signs and anti-government slogans. A former lawmaker, Lee Cheuk-yan, led chants of “end one-party rule,” and “democracy for China!” while others used slogans from last year’s elections, “Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong!” There were reports of police using pepper spray against the protesters.

Read more on the story here

Police reportedly used pepper spray against some protesters

Police arrested those on their way to the memorial

Some claim that Hong Kong is not Beijing’s only target

US will have a presence on the Hong Kong stock market

 

 

Kim Yo Jong Calls Leaflet Distributors “Human Scum,” Threatens South Korea

Kim Jong Un’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, made a statement yesterday regarding anti-Pyongyang leaflets that are being sent across the North/South Korea border. The two countries have been re-negotiating a 2018 military agreement, but Kim Yo Jong has threatened to stop the agreement and close down a cross-border liaison unless South Korea stops their activists from sending leaflet filled balloons into North Korean territory. “The South Korean authorities will be forced to pay a dear price if they let this situation go on while making all sort of excuses,” Yo Jong said in a live TV broadcast. She called the activists “rubbish-like mongrel dogs” and said it was “time to bring their owners to account,” meaning the South Korean government.

Read more on the story here

Seoul responds to North Korea’s threats

North Korea weighs in on US protests

North Korea claims the US is eclipsed by China

Could Kim Yo Jong be next in line to lead North Korea?

NYC Reports No New Coronavirus Deaths in 24 Hours

For the first time since March 13th, New York City has not had any new coronavirus related deaths in a 24 hour period. City Hall spokeswoman Avery Cohen said, “In the face of extraordinary challenges, New Yorkers have gone above and beyond to keep each other safe throughout the crisis.” At the peak of the pandemic in NYC, there were over 500 fatalities a day. New York City has reported 21,752 virus-linked deaths and over 205,000 confirmed cases. “With hope on the horizon, we will continue to do everything we can to reopen safely without losing sight of the progress we’ve made,” said Cohen.

Read more on the story here

For current COVID-19 data click here

Sweden may not have had the better COVID-19 results that so many lauded

Las Vegas reopens the casinos

Protesters march across Brooklyn Bridge

 

Two Buffalo Police Officers Suspended for Shoving 75-yo Protester

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In Buffalo, New York, a video has been circulating showing an older man walking toward the police riot line. As he approaches the line he appears to be shoved backwards. He fell and hit the ground with an audible thud and blood can be seen coming out from his ear and under his head. He was transported to the hospital where the Buffalo mayor, Byron W Brown, states that he is in “stable but serious” condition. The officers involved have been suspended without pay pending an investigation. Brown tweeted “I was deeply disturbed by the video, as was Buffalo Police Commissioner Byron Lockwood.”

Read more on the story here

The initial police statement claimed the man was injured when he “tripped and fell”

See the video here

Buffalo police officer leads crown in hymn

A car drove through a line of police officers at protests in Buffalo, NY

Tokyo Experiences Spike in Coronavirus Cases After Lifting Lockdown

Japan lifted their national state of emergency on May 25th, declaring they had beaten coronavirus. Today Tokyo alerted residents to an increase in COVID-19 cases and urged everyone to stay at home and practice social distancing. 34 new cases were discovered on Tuesday, the highest daily number for the city since early May. This system is being called a “Tokyo Alert” and per the governor of Tokyo, Yuriko Koike, “The Tokyo Alert is a step to inform Tokyo residents of the status of the outbreak and call on them to take caution.” The government says that they are not imposing any new restrictions at the moment, but if the number of cases keeps increasing they will consider slowing down the reopening of the country.

Read more on the story here

Tokyo’s baseball team called off a game after one of the players tested positive for coronavirus

Shimbara holds memorium to mark 29 years since the deadly volcanic disaster

Japan says that South Korea is “not helping” to solve the differences between the two countries

Anime studio president accused of not paying over $1 million in taxes

[WATCH] A conversation with President Obama: Reimagining Policing in the Wake of Continued Police Violence

President Obama joins local and national leaders in the police reform movement, to discuss the tragic events of recent weeks, the history of police violence in America, and specific action steps needed to transform a system that has led to the loss of too many lives.

Get engaged at: https://www.obama.org/anguish-and-action/

President Obama joins Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, President of Color of Change Rashad Robinson, Minneapolis City Council Representative Phillipe Cunningham, and MBK Columbus Youth Leader Playon Patrick, in a conversation moderated by Campaign Zero co-founder Brittany Packnett Cunningham.

Drew Brees: “I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag…”

By the time you read this, it’s likely (if not outright probable) that New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees will have issued a “clarification” for his remarks as to the importance of standing for the National Anthem (below).

The initial reaction is to again call into question the conceit among the famous in which they operate under the generally misplaced perception that they are somehow qualified to weigh in on matters better left alone. The secondary response is to believe that because Brees has a relationship with President Donald Trump and, on the surface, appears to be a Trump supporter, his statements were an opaque defense of the methods used by the Trump administration to deal with the ongoing protests over the murder of George Floyd.

Brees’s comments will cause him problems and it’s a certainty that he will backtrack on them to some degree. Whether there is a complete about face or the previously mentioned carefully worded clarification will hinge on the need for damage control. Brees has been a likable personality, is a future Hall of Fame quarterback, is known for his charity work, is popular with his teammates and around the NFL. That should grant him some leeway provided he strikes the necessary balance of contrition and explanation for his comments.

The easy thing to do is to say his comments were inappropriate. That’s the consensus as he’s being shredded for his supposed insensitivity. However, there was sufficient ambiguity to make the argument that he was not overtly criticizing Colin Kaepernick and other players who have kneeled in solidarity to protest police brutality, but expressing his belief that people should stand for the National Anthem and why he feels that way; that kneeling and disrespecting the flag is not an effective strategy to stoke the change that Kaepernick was seeking when he began his campaign – a campaign that cost him his job in the NFL.

Brees did not dismiss Kaepernick’s reason for kneeling. He didn’t even mention it. He said verbatim he “will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country.” The subsequent explanation about his grandfathers having served in World War II along with the dull and repetitive platitudes about how everything is not right with the country and there’s a “long way to go” will elicit eye rolling among residents of the East and West Coast and a large segment of the media. But to put it in a different context and understand where Brees is coming from figuratively, it’s important to look at where he comes from literally. Brees is from Texas. He went to college at Purdue in Indiana. He plays professionally in Louisiana. These are three of the reddest of the red states in the union; places where his commentary is not just a factional belief, it’s the norm.

The American freedom of expression gives Kaepernick the right to protest. Brees also has the right to say that he does not agree with it without being forced to issue an insincere apology due to mounting pressure and because he does not want to lose his lucrative endorsements or ruin his good reputation.

The key component here is the timing. Brees hit a nerve by saying this now. If the United States was not dealing with an ongoing pandemic; protesting, looting and rioting in the aftermath of Floyd’s murder; and fears of onrushing authoritarianism from a president who is, to put it mildly, polarizing, it would have garnered some agreement, some disagreement and mostly shrugs. Add in the images of Brees and his wife smiling with the Trumps and the puzzle pieces easily fit to stoke the narrative of the Trump-loving Brees denigrating the good intentions of Kaepernick at precisely the time when Kaepernick’s cause is being shown to have been valid and Trump is seeking to quash dissent during his re-election campaign.

These are multiple hoops to jump through to make an encompassing assumption of who Brees is as a person because he holds strong feelings about the American flag, but these same assumptions have been made for four years about Kaepernick and for those four years, they have left him unable to find work in the NFL.

In the same vein of Kaepernick being told to accept his role in the NFL, keep his mouth shut and he’ll have a job, Brees is now being told that he too should stay quiet about his perspective on these complex issues when he was asked a direct question about it. Perhaps he should have stayed quiet. It would be far easier for the well-known to stay apolitical. Kaepernick chose not to do that and so has Brees. Despite their positions appearing to be diametrically opposed, Brees has the same right to voice his opinion as Kaepernick did regardless of how it is received by the opposite sides who are never going to agree about it anyway.

No New Coronavirus Deaths in Spain for 24 Hours

Spain was hit hard by the coronavirus, with a peak death toll of 950 deaths in 24 hours at the beginning of April. The country enacted one of the strictest lockdowns worldwide and, as of today, have had no new coronavirus linked deaths in the past 24 hours for the first time since March. With only 71 new cases of the virus across the country, Spain is well on its way to recovery. The official death toll is 27,127, with the number of confirmed cases listed at 240,000. In wake of this news the lockdown restrictions are gradually being relaxed, but the Spanish government warns that the threat isn’t gone and the restrictions could be tightened again.

Read more on the story here

The Prime Minister of Spain made a statement regarding the lockdown restrictions

Spanish economy will be affected by the lack of tourism

Hotel profits in Europe at record low

International travel restrictions will be lifted July 1st, but will anyone fly?