Game on: How COVID-19 became the perfect match for gamers
COVID-19 saw popular video games, including Call of Duty and Fall Guys, explode in popularity, as consumers were forced to stay at home and keep themselves entertained.
Adam (@aepstein) is a reporter for Quartz, covering the future of television and its reverberations throughout business, technology, and culture. He attended Johns Hopkins University as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow, where he wrote about the abolitionist John Brown with disturbing frequency and cultivated his obsession with all things Cormac McCarthy. He also has a master's degree from Columbia Journalism School. Before coming to Quartz, Adam was a freelance entertainment writer and worked briefly in publishing.
COVID-19 saw popular video games, including Call of Duty and Fall Guys, explode in popularity, as consumers were forced to stay at home and keep themselves entertained.
Netflix added a record 15.77 million global subscribers in the first quarter—many of whom signed up after lockdowns began in countries around the world.
NASA's Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) has two main tasks.
NASA is developing a new generation of spacecrafts – powered by solar energy.