Wikipedia:Main Page/Tomorrow
From tomorrow's featured article
Donkey Kong Land is a platform game developed by Rare and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy (pictured). Released on June 26, 1995, it condenses the side-scrolling gameplay of Donkey Kong Country with a different level design and boss fights. The player controls Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong as they recover their stolen banana hoard from King K. Rool. Development began in 1994: Rare's Game Boy programmer, Paul Machacek, developed Land as an original game rather than a port of Country, believing that it would be a better use of resources. Land features pre-rendered graphics converted to sprites through a compression technique. Rare retooled Country's gameplay to account for the lower-quality display, and David Wise and Graeme Norgate converted the soundtrack to the Game Boy's sound chip. Critics praised it as successfully translating Country's gameplay, visuals, and music to the Game Boy. Land was rereleased for the Nintendo 3DS and the Nintendo Switch. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that Taraxacum brachyglossum (pictured) can reproduce both sexually and asexually, depending on environmental conditions?
- ... that although Frederick Rondel was taught to paint by a French king's court painter, he chose to depict American landscapes like the Adirondack Mountains?
- ... that a 19th-century water-pumping station is now a wedding venue?
- ... that Washington University in St. Louis holds one of the few surviving printed broadsides of the United States Declaration of Independence?
- ... that Jerzy Broszkiewicz, a louse-feeder during World War II, later became a writer of youth literature and drama?
- ... that Lorde wrote a song about herself titled "Man of the Year" the day after attending GQ's "Men of the Year" party in 2023?
- ... that American football player Curtis Burrow, the fourth different kicker used by the Green Bay Packers in 1988, played one game before being released?
- ... that Bukit Brown Cemetery is believed to be the largest Chinese cemetery outside of China, with over 100,000 burials?
- ... that an eight-week UK number-one single co-written by Audrey Hobert has a sexually explicit version?
In the news (For today)
- The Vera C. Rubin Observatory (pictured) in Chile releases the first light images from its new 8.4-meter (28 ft) telescope.
- In basketball, the Oklahoma City Thunder defeat the Indiana Pacers to win the NBA Finals.
- An attack on a Greek Orthodox church in Damascus, Syria, kills at least 25 people.
- The United States conducts military strikes on three nuclear facilities in Iran.
- In rugby union, the Crusaders defeat the Chiefs to win the Super Rugby Pacific final.
On the next day
- 1740 – War of Jenkins' Ear: Spanish troops stormed the British-held strategically crucial position of Fort Mose in Spanish Florida.
- 1945 – At a conference in San Francisco, delegates from 50 nations signed a charter establishing the United Nations.
- 1950 – A Douglas DC-4 Skymaster aircraft (pictured) crashed after departing from Perth, becoming the worst aviation accident in Australia's peacetime history.
- 2010 – A G20 summit, the largest and most expensive security operation in Canadian history, began in downtown Toronto.
- 2015 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that the right of same-sex couples to marry is guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
- Robert the Lotharingian (d. 1095)
- George IV of the United Kingdom (d. 1830)
- Walter C. Root (d. 1925)
- Pavel Belyayev (b. 1925)
Tomorrow's featured picture
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Atacamite is a copper halide mineral: a copper(II) chloride hydroxide with the chemical formula Cu2Cl(OH)3. It was first described in 1802 by Dmitri Alekseyevich Golitsyn from deposits in Chile's Atacama Desert, after which it is named. Atacamite is a comparatively rare mineral, formed from primary copper minerals in the oxidation or weathering zone of arid climates. It has also been reported as a volcanic sublimate from fumarole deposits, as sulfide alteration products in black smokers. This photograph shows a specimen of atacamite, on a malachite matrix, from the Mount Gunson Mines in South Australia. The picture was focus-stacked from 42 separate images. Photograph credit: Ivar Leidus
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