Totally—there are plenty of audiobook and online editions of works titled 'Pandemic' as well as lots of digital ways to experience the board
Game 'Pandemic'. I’ve binged a few of these myself, so here’s what I’ve found: if you’re after the nonfiction deep dives like 'Pandemic: Tracking Contagions, from Cholera to Ebola and Beyond' or medical thrillers titled 'Pandemic' (there are multiple authors),
Audible,
Libro.fm, Apple Books,
google play books,
kobo, and even CD/MP3 sellers usually carry audiobook editions. Libraries are a goldmine too: OverDrive/Libby and Hoopla often have both
ebooks and audiobooks for popular pandemic-themed titles, and you can borrow them with a library card.
If you mean the tabletop hit 'Pandemic', it also has digital incarnations. There’s a faithful app/PC version published by the game’s digital partners (look for 'Pandemic: The Board Game' on Steam and on mobile storefronts), and smaller spin-offs like 'Pandemic: Hot Zone' have been ported digitally as well. Those let you play
solo or co-op online, and they include tutorials that are way friendlier than the first box I opened. For
pdfs and online reading, some authors/publishers put sample chapters online; academic coverage and WHO/CDC reports are freely available as downloadable PDFs if you want the science side.
Practical tip: use the sample play on Audible or sample read on Kindle to check narration style, and check your library apps first because you might snag titles for free. I’ve hopped between narrated nonfiction and the digital board game when I want the thrill of outbreaks without
leaving the couch—both scratch different itches, and I usually end up learning something while being entertained.