SOTA Volunteers with Community Food Share: Gaming for Good in Boulder & Broomfield Counties
At SOTA, showing up for our community is part of the mission. Beyond the screens, streams, and scoreboards, real impact happens face to face. This week, SOTA volunteers MutedMonster and KatB649 spent time with Community Food Share in Louisville, Colorado, rolling up their sleeves to support neighbors across Boulder and Broomfield counties.
From Produce Sorting to Pantry-Ready Carts
Working alongside Community Food Share staff and fellow volunteers, our team jumped right into the flow of the warehouse—sorting fresh produce and helping pre-fill carts for pantry guests. The work moved fast and required attention to detail, especially with the wide mix of uncommon fruits and vegetables coming through the line.
Each cart was thoughtfully prepared to give neighbors not just food, but choice, dignity, and something new for the table. It’s one thing to talk about service; it’s another to feel how much care goes into every step that leads to a family walking out with what they need.
Fueling a Network That Feeds Thousands
Community Food Share isn’t just a pantry—it’s a full-scale distribution engine powered by compassion, coordination, and community effort. The organization serves more than 2,000 neighbors each week through its on-site food pantry and distributes food to partner pantries throughout Boulder and Broomfield counties—helping deliver an incredible 27,000 meals every day.
When you’re on site, you can see the system at work: volunteers, staff, and logistics moving together with a shared purpose. It’s a reminder that consistency is what creates impact—showing up, doing the work, and keeping the line moving so food reaches the people counting on it.
Different Arena, Same Mindset
SOTA is proud to stand with organizations like Community Food Share and continue serving our local communities. Different arena, same mindset: teamwork, consistency, and showing up when it matters. 💜
If you’ve been looking for a way to get involved locally, this is your sign. Whether it’s two hours or a full day, every shift helps strengthen the network that keeps families fed—and keeps communities moving forward.