Finding a mimicry game for teaching on-line and mentioned general resources

Mimicry and other resources
Mimicry games:
Great Heliconius game:
http://heliconius.org/evolving_butterflies/
(See also 
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2020.0014)
Other one, a bit less friendly:
https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/Mimicry
Camouflage practical
https://alexis-catherine.github.io/publication/natural-selection-and-camouflage/
(NetLogo also has one: 
https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/BugHuntCamouflage)
Peppered moth game:
https://askabiologist.asu.edu/peppered-moths-game/play.html

General resources
The always popular Populus:
https://cbs.umn.edu/populus/overview
Drift & Gene Flow 
https://cartwrig.ht/apps/genie/
(Cock van Oosterhout has a great ppt to lead students through this)
See also https://cartwrig.ht/apps/redlynx/
https://demonstrations.wolfram.com/ReplicatorMutatorDynamicsWithThreeStrategies/
NetLogo:
http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/index.cgi
Population Genetics:
https://www.radford.edu/~rsheehy/Gen_flash/popgen/
Evolution in general
https://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/home.php
Mitochondrial Eve:
https://projects.ncsu.edu/cals/gn/ex/mit-eve.html
Y chromosomes:
https://projects.ncsu.edu/cals/gn/ex/y-chrom.html
A professional online package from Michael Kasumovic:
https://arludo.com/
a compilation of resources:
https://planted.botany.org/index.php?P=Home
Finally, Donald Forsdyke has some great on-line videos explaining
evolutionary principles (occasionally in a fake Scottish accent):
http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/videolectures.htm