Comunix Closes $30 Million Series A Funding
USA - English
News provided by
Share this article
Share this article
TEL AVIV, Israel, June 2, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Comunix, one of the fastest-growing social gaming startups and the company behind the hit game Pokerface, today announced that it has closed $30 million in Series A funding led by March Gaming to accelerate its transformative vision of reinventing the social gaming experience and uniting people worldwide.
Pokerface
Comunix Co-Founders Or Ben Shimon and Idan Shriki
New investors, including March Capital, Powerhouse, Woori Capital and Altshuler Shaham, and existing investors, including Kaedan Capital, Velo Partners, Moon Active, Mitch Garber, Shay Ben-Yitzhak, Eitan Reisel and Baladi Ventures, also participated in the funding round.
Hollywood Boulevard is one of the most famous streets in the world a universal symbol of glamour and fame. It attracts 10 million tourists a year. It’s the destination for dreamers hoping to “make it” in show business.
What’s in a street name? Hollywood Blvd is torn between its historic past and economic future MORE Hollywood Boulevard wasn’t always where you’d come to make it in show business. It used to be “where you would come after you had made it to enjoy the rest of your life surrounded by beautiful flowers and gardens and … be restored to health and sanity,” says journalist and local historian Hadley Meares. “(It’s) crazy to think you would be restored to health and sanity if you moved to Hollywood. Photo by Mike Schlitt.
Hollywood Boulevard is one of the most famous streets in the world a universal symbol of glamour and fame. It attracts 10 million tourists a year. It’s the destination for dreamers hoping to “make it” in show business.
Records suggest defendant called 911 during Minnesota attack mynorthwest.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mynorthwest.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Prosecutors say a shooter brought four bombs and a handgun to a small-town clinic, apparently as revenge for back treatment he was unhappy with, and killed one while injuring four others.
A Minneapolis Bomb Squad vehicle is parked near the entrance to the Allina Health Clinic in Buffalo, Minn., on Tuesday. (Dave Schwarz/St. Cloud Times via AP)
BUFFALO, Minn. (CN) A man who allegedly bombed a rural Minnesota clinic and shot five staff members on Tuesday has been charged with second-degree murder.
Gregory Ulrich, 67, also faces four counts of first-degree attempted murder, possession of an explosive or incendiary device and carrying a pistol without a permit for an alleged attack on Allina Health Clinic in Buffalo, Minnesota, a small town 42 miles northwest of the Twin Cities.