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Article edited by the largest number of users: [v] Wikipedia (13,671 editors) [cc] Page edited by the largest number of users outside of the mainspace: [v] Wikipedia:Sandbox (12,024 editors, as of 15 July 2019) [cd] Article unedited for the longest time: See Wikipedia:Database reports/Forgotten articles
First Top 25 Report #1 article with 2M+ page views: Mary Leakey (February 3–9, 2013) First Top 25 Report #1 article with 3M+ page views: Valentine's Day (February 10–16, 2013) First Top 25 Report #1 article with 4–9M+ page views: Shakuntala Devi (November 3–9, 2013) Hermann Rorschach (#2) also attained 4M+ page views during the same ...
The University of Milan created an engine of the complete yearly ranking of all Wikipedia articles for 2014–2021. [5] In 2013 the BBC published an article discussing most searched Wikipedia articles in 2012 in different languages. [6] Other versions of top-lists for shorter periods are regularly published and discussed by external popular media.
The Wikipedia:Top 25 Report is a list that presents the 25 most viewed articles on the English Wikipedia for a given week, derived from the WP:5000, an automated report of the most viewed 5000 Wikipedia pages.
This list excludes the Wikipedia main page, non-article pages (such as redlinks), and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views). Since mobile view data became available to the Report in October 2014, we exclude articles that have almost no mobile views (5–6% or less) or almost all mobile views (94–95% or more ...
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This is a list of the articles with the most references on Wikipedia. Reference count updates and the inclusion of articles are done manually and reflect the information as of the date indicated for the respective article. For a more accurate and comprehensive list, see User:KiranBOT/MOSTREFS.
The WP:MASSCREATION of articles that uses any sort of automation requires community approval. Mass creation of articles generally can result in disruptions. The order of the top 100 editors has thus been scrambled in order to discourage mass creation by competitive users who seek a high rank, such as to become the #1 Wikipedia editor.