If you think a list of Wikipedia pages is trivia, think again. The 2025 edition reveals a year when a single page could spark a global spectacle: Charlie Kirk’s page drew nearly 45 million views after he was shot on a university campus on Sept 10, and the day after recorded 15 million views — roughly 170 reads per second. The scope of attention shows how a single event can ignite a worldwide information surge, turning an individual into a focal point of the public imagination.
The year’s most-read entry was the Charlie Kirk page, followed closely by a steady drumbeat of cultural markers: the standard annual entry Deaths in 2025 with about 42.5 million views, Ed Gein’s page, Donald Trump’s profile, and Pope Leo XIV, the first US-born pope, among others. In total, English Wikipedia reports about 2.4 billion hours spent reading articles in 2025, underscoring how digital curiosity shapes conversations across borders, with more than 40% of views coming from outside the United States.
A Year in Curiosity: Who Captured Our Attention?
- Charlie Kirk — ~45 million views; spike after campus shooting on Sept 10
- Deaths in 2025 — ~42.5 million views
- Ed Gein — ~31.2 million views
- Donald Trump — ~25.1 million views
- Pope Leo XIV — ~22.1 million views
Beyond politics and tragedy, the list highlights entertainment and film pages, including entries on Ozzy Osbourne, the 2025 films Sinners and Superman, and long-running topics like Severance and various TV series. The mix reveals a 2025 reading culture that blends current events with evergreen pop culture, underscoring how audiences seek context in a rapidly evolving media landscape. The geographic spread—roughly a quarter of top views from outside the US—emphasizes a global hunger for insight into the year’s biggest moments, figures, and stories.