
Atlantic Trivia for March 31, 2026: Board Games
Test your knowledge—and read our stories for a little extra help.

Test your knowledge—and read our stories for a little extra help.

Electronics are getting more expensive and worse. Blame the AI boom.

Māori families with a mutation for aggressive gastric cancer have had their stomachs preemptively removed. How do you live without one?

He can’t scare Iran and reassure the markets at the same time. But he’s trying.

The fake trend is a real expression of the internet’s drive toward extremism.

Ukraine’s ambassador to Hungary represents a government that has become Viktor Orbán’s primary target.

“To me, the concept of the master diagnostician is that you’re never good enough,” one doctor said.

The new age of war is already here, swarming over Barksdale Air Force Base.

The Trump administration seems to be leaning on the movement as a distraction.

The defense secretary is trolling America.

Ten years ago, AlphaGo trounced human competitors—and its legacy is still present in today’s most advanced bots.

LaMonica McIver of New Jersey is arguing that the Department of Justice can’t prosecute her for an incident last May at an ICE facility.

Test your knowledge—and read our stories for a little extra help.

Bruce Friedrich has devoted his life to reducing American meat consumption—and he isn’t giving up just yet.

Stories about revolutionaries seem to entrance readers and moviegoers alike—especially if they don’t end well.

Fringe elements of American society have never accepted that birthright citizenship is the law of the land.

The housing bill now in Congress may seek to increase the housing supply—but not for renters.

Washington’s conduct in the Iran war is accelerating global chaos and deepening America’s dangerous isolation.

A poem

It hasn’t been going well.