Write a diary entry in150 birds about being forced to stay at home due to covid-19 and missing your school,games, friends etc.
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Answer:
Even before the COVID-19 outbreak, games have long had a social component for players who weren't in the same room together. Apps like online game site Pogo allow your kids to play some of their favorite board games, like Monopoly and Yahtzee, with friends without sitting around the same table. It's also possible to game with friends using Xbox Live and Nintendo Online (both of which require paid subscriptions) — kids can share their usernames and play video games like Minecraft and Roblox against each other. For something lower-tech, Let’s Play Uno allows kids to play this timeless card game with friends for free. And Pokemon Go lets kids to interact with friends and even track their activity in the game. Since the COVID-19 outbreak, the game’s manufacturers have made adjustments to the game that bring the Pokemon closer to home.
Host a movie night and have them all watch together.
Netflix Party lets kids to watch movies together. Anyone with a monthly Netflix subscription can add this free Google Chrome extension. You can synchronize video playback with your child’s friends and add group chat so kids can "talk" during the movie. Anyone in the group can pause, play, fast forward and rewind the movie so everyone is in the same spot. Only those with an invite can get into the party, so parents don’t need to worry about strangers getting into the chat room. (For those without Netflix, Airtime does something similar for online videos and TV shows, with video reactions instead of text ones.) Grab your kid some snacks, set up a comfy spot on the couch, pop some popcorn, and let them have a long-distance movie night with a friend or two.
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