རྒྱལ་ཁབ་ཁག
As standard time (Northern Hemisphere winter)


Canada United States Florida, Indiana, Michigan Tennessee
Canada - Eastern Time Zone Nunavut (eastern), most of Ontario and most of Quebec United States - Eastern Time Zone All of Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia Most of Florida, Indiana, and Michigan Eastern parts of Kentucky and Tennessee Unofficial use in several communities in Russell County, Alabama, including Phenix City. Although the legal time for all of Alabama during the standard time period is Central Time (UTC–6), Phenix City and its surrounding communities informally synchronize their clocks with the considerably larger city of Columbus, Georgia, directly across the Chattahoochee River from Phenix City.

The Bahamas Cuba
The Bahamas Turks and Caicos Islands Cuba

Panama Colombia Ecuador Peru Brazil Chile
Panama Colombia Ecuador mainland, excluding Galápagos Peru - Time in Peru Brazil Acre and southwestern part of Amazonas state, around Eirunepé Chile Easter Island

༆འཡའལ ཱཔཔོུད (Arabic: ليال عبود‎‎:pronounced [layāl ʿab'boud]; born 15 May 1982) is a Lebanese pop singer, folk music entertainer, sound-lyric poet, concert dancer, fit model, Muslim humanitarian and businesswoman.[1][2][3]
Layal Abboud (Arabic: ليال عبود‎‎:pronounced [layāl ʿab'boud]; born 15 May 1982) is a Lebanese pop singer, folk music entertainer, sound-lyric poet, concert dancer, fit model, Muslim humanitarian and businesswoman.[1][2][3]

༆འཡའལ ཱཔཔོུད
Layal Abboud

Lobsang Nyandak, sometimes written Lobsang Nyendak (Tibetan: བློ་བཟང་སྙན་གྲགས, Wylie: blo bzang snyan grags ) also called Lobsang Nyandak Zayul ( Tibetan: བློ་བཟང་སྙན་གྲགས་རྫ་ཡུལ, Wylie: blo bzang snyan grags rdza yul) is a Tibetan diplomat and politician.[1][2] born in 1965 in Kalimpong, India where he performed his studies in Herbertpur and at Panjab University in Chandigarh.
Lobsang Nyandak, sometimes written Lobsang Nyendak (Tibetan: བློ་བཟང་སྙན་གྲགས, Wylie: blo bzang snyan grags ) also called Lobsang Nyandak Zayul (Tibetan: བློ་བཟང་སྙན་གྲགས་རྫ་ཡུལ, Wylie: blo bzang snyan grags rdza yul ) is a Tibetan diplomat and politician.[1][2] born in 1965 in Kalimpong, India where he performed his studies in Herbertpur and at Panjab University in Chandigarh.

In 1996, Nyandak was elected to the Tibetan Parliament, to represent the province of Kham in Eastern Tibet.[1] During this period, Nyandak also served as Vice President and Secretary of the Executive Committee of the National Democratic Party of Tibet.[2].
In 1996, Nyandak was elected to the Tibetan Parliament, to represent the province of Kham in Eastern Tibet.[16] During this period, Nyandak also served as Vice President and Secretary of the Executive Committee of the National Democratic Party of Tibet.[2]

In 2001, Nyandak was appointed as a Minister (Kalon) during the first tenure of Samdhong Rinpoche (Lobsang Tenzin),[1] the first elected Prime Minister (Kalon Tripa) of the Central Tibetan Administration.[2] As a Kalon, Nyandak was in charge of three departments: the Department of Information and International Relations (2005–2006),[3] the Department of Finance (2001–2006)[4] and the Department of Health (2001–2005).[5].
In 2001, Nyandak was appointed as a Minister (Kalon) during the first tenure of Samdhong Rinpoche (Lobsang Tenzin),[1] the first elected Prime Minister (Kalon Tripa) of the Central Tibetan Administration.[17] As a Kalon, Nyandak was in charge of three departments: the Department of Information and International Relations (2005–2006),[18] the Department of Finance (2001–2006)[19] and the Department of Health (2001–2005).[20]

As Minister of International Relations, Nyandak served as a member of the Task Force of the Sino-Tibetan Dialogue from 2005 to 2006 [fr] and again from 2012 to present.[1][2][3][4][5]
As Minister of International Relations, Nyandak served as a member of the Task Force of the Sino-Tibetan Dialogue from 2005 to 2006 [fr] and again from 2012 to present.[21][22][23][24][25]

As Minister of Finance, Nyandak oversaw the overall financial health of the CTA[1][2] and established Tibetan business bodies, including the Tibetan Chamber of Commerce.[3][4] During this time period, Nyandak also served as Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors of the CTA's Social and Resource Development Fund (SARD)[5] and Managing Trustee of the Dalai Lama's Charitable Trust.[6].
As Minister of Finance, Nyandak oversaw the overall financial health of the CTA[26][27] and established Tibetan business bodies, including the Tibetan Chamber of Commerce.[28][29] During this time period, Nyandak also served as Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors of the CTA's Social and Resource Development Fund (SARD)[30] and Managing Trustee of the Dalai Lama's Charitable Trust.[6]

Nyandak moved to the United States with his family in 2007 and joined the Tibet Fund as its Development Director in 2008 until he was appointed as the Representative of the 14th Dalai Lama at the Office of Tibet in United States from September 2008 to 2013.[1][2][3] He was responsible for organizing visits of the Dalai Lama to North America, including arranging meetings with leaders and educators.[4][5][6].
Nyandak moved to the United States with his family in 2007 and joined the Tibet Fund as its Development Director in 2008 until he was appointed as the Representative of the 14th Dalai Lama at the Office of Tibet in United States from September 2008 to 2013.[31][32][33] He was responsible for organizing visits of the Dalai Lama to North America, including arranging meetings with leaders and educators.[34][35][36]

In 2013, Nyandak was appointed as the Executive Director of the Tibet Fund,[1] and in 2017, he became President of the organization.[2].
In 2013, Nyandak was appointed as the Executive Director of the Tibet Fund,[37] and in 2017, he became President of the organization.[38]

Lobsang Nyandak was candidate initially for the 2011 election of Tibetan Prime Minister and a poll directed by Shambala Post estimated he was second in popularity, after Lobsang Sangay.[1] He finally decided not to run for the 2011 election.[2].
Lobsang Nyandak was candidate initially for the 2011 election of Tibetan Prime Minister and a poll directed by Shambala Post estimated he was second in popularity, after Lobsang Sangay.[39] He finally decided not to run for the 2011 election.[40]

On March 2, 2020,[1] Lobsang Nyandak publicly announced his candidacy for the 2021 election of Tibetan Prime Minister (Sikyong).[2].
On March 2, 2020,[1] Lobsang Nyandak publicly announced his candidacy for the 2021 election of Tibetan Prime Minister (Sikyong).[41]

In his program, he declares he is confident to re-establish contact with the Chinese Government to resolve the Tibetan issue, and aims to transform Tibet in a peace zone, as envisaged by the 14th Dalai Lama[1].
In his program, he declares he is confident to re-establish contact with the Chinese Government to resolve the Tibetan issue, and aims to transform Tibet in a peace zone, as envisaged by the 14th Dalai Lama[42]

Personal life.
Personal life

Nyandak was born in Kalimpong, India in 1965 to a Tibetan refugee family.[1] He completed his elementary and high school education at SFF Tibetan School in Herbertpur, India,[2] a school for children of Tibetan families recruited into the Special Frontier Force (SFF).[3] Nyandak graduated from Panjab University in Chandigarh, India, with a B.A. and a B.Ed. in 1986.[2][4]
Nyandak was born in Kalimpong, India in 1965 to a Tibetan refugee family.[4] He completed his elementary and high school education at SFF Tibetan School in Herbertpur, India,[5] a school for children of Tibetan families recruited into the Special Frontier Force (SFF).[6] Nyandak graduated from Panjab University in Chandigarh, India, with a B.A. and a B.Ed. in 1986.[5][7]

Nyandak is married to Tenzin Palmo. ] They have three children. .
Nyandak is married to Tenzin Palmo.[when?] They have three children.[citation needed]

Publications.
Publications

The Dalai Lama Institution is a Year Older!, Tibet Sun, 7 July 2020. Opinion: Why am I running for Sikyong?, Tibetan Review, 16 August 2020
The Dalai Lama Institution is a Year Older!, Tibet Sun, 7 July 2020 Opinion: Why am I running for Sikyong?, Tibetan Review, 16 August 2020

See also.
See also

2021 Central Tibetan Administration general election 1996 Tibetan Parliament in Exile election Samdhong Rinpoche. Sikyong
2021 Central Tibetan Administration general election 1996 Tibetan Parliament in Exile election Samdhong Rinpoche Sikyong

↑ Template:Cite news ↑ Template:Cite news ↑ Dalai Lama official representative to hold Q&A at "Dalai Lama Renaissance" screening in New York on February 28 at 4 p.m. at the Rubin Museum of Art, Wakan Films (dalailamafilm.com), February 26, 2009 1 2 Empty citation (help) 1 2 3 4 Empty citation (help) ↑ Kaydor Aukatsang, Memories and Association of a Lifetime – Remembering SFF CST Herbertpur, Phayul.com, 12 February 2020 1 2 Empty citation (help) 1 2 Tibet Fund director announces candidature for top exile Tibetan elective post, Tibetan Review, 5 mars 2020 ↑ Template:Cite news ↑ Template:Citation ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Template:Interlanguage link, Les Asiatiques dénoncent l'opposition entre droits de l'homme et « valeurs asiatiques », Le Monde, 16 avril 1998 ↑ Empty citation (help) 1 2 Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Template:Cite news ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Empty citation (help) ↑ Sam Littlefair, Rinchen Dharlo retires as president of Tibet Fund, Lion's Roar, 29 juin 2017 ↑ Holly Brooke-Smith, Lobsang Sangay Tops Tibetan Opinion Poll for Next PM, The Tibet Post International, 7 May 2010 ↑ བཀའ་བློན་ཁྲི་པའི་འོས་གཞི་རུ་ལང་རྒྱུའི་འདོད་པ་དང་འཆར་གཞི་རྩ་བ་ཉིད་ནས་མེད།, The Tibet Express, 26 February 2010 ↑ Choekyi Lhamo, Preparations for 2021 general elections underway, says Election Commissioner, Phayul.com, 27 July 2020 ↑ Lobsang Nyandak: Why am I running for Sikyong?, Tibet Sun, 16 August 2020
Retrieved 2020-03-06. ↑ "Tibetan Youth Congress: Past and Present", Voice of America, retrieved 2020-04-07 ↑ "Emory-Tibet Partnership | News & Events". college.emory.edu (Emory University). Retrieved 2020-03-13. ↑ "NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS CLAIM NUMEROUS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS AROUND WORLD | Meetings Coverage and Press Releases". www.un.org (United Nations Information Service at Geneva). Retrieved 2020-04-07. ↑ Jean-Claude Buhrer [fr], Les Asiatiques dénoncent l'opposition entre droits de l'homme et « valeurs asiatiques », Le Monde, 16 avril 1998 ↑ "China defeated at UN vote".

Nyandak served as General Secretary of the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress (RTYC) in Chandigarh, India (1987[1]-89).[2][3] Nyandak became Executive Secretary and Joint Secretary of the Central Executive Committee (Centrex) of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) (1990–92) and later took over as General Secretary of TYC (1992–1995).[2][4]
Nyandak served as General Secretary of the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress (RTYC) in Chandigarh, India (1987[8]-89).[2][9] Nyandak became Executive Secretary and Joint Secretary of the Central Executive Committee (Centrex) of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) (1990–92) and later took over as General Secretary of TYC (1992–1995).[5][10]

Nyandak was the founding Executive Director of the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD), a non-governmental human rights organisation established in January 1996 in Dharamsala.[1] He represented Tibetans at international conferences, such as in 1997 at the the UN Human Rights Commission;[2] in 1998 at a conference-debate on Human Rights and Asian values organized by International Federation for Human Rights and Wei Jingsheng on the sidelines of the UN Human Rights Commission session in Geneva;[3] in 2001 at the World Conference against Racism in South Africa.[4] Following his appointment as minister in 2001, Nyandak served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the TCHRD from 2001 until 2004.[5].
Nyandak was the founding Executive Director of the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD), a non-governmental human rights organisation established in January 1996 in Dharamsala.[11] He represented Tibetans at international conferences, such as in 1997 at the the UN Human Rights Commission;[12] in 1998 at a conference-debate on Human Rights and Asian values organized by International Federation for Human Rights and Wei Jingsheng on the sidelines of the UN Human Rights Commission session in Geneva;[13] in 2001 at the World Conference against Racism in South Africa.[14] Following his appointment as minister in 2001, Nyandak served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the TCHRD from 2001 until 2004.[15]

Hospital in Himachal Pradesh, India བདེ་ལེགས་སྨན་ཁང་། Geography Location གངས་ཅན་སྐྱིད་ཤོངས་ 176215 Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh, India Coordinates 32°13′19″N 76°19′02″E / 32.222°N 76.3172°E / 32.222; 76.3172Coordinates: 32°13′19″N 76°19′02″E / 32.222°N 76.3172°E / 32.222; 76.3172 Services Beds ༤༥ History Opened ༡༩༧༡ Links Website
Hospital in Himachal Pradesh, India Tibetan Delek Hospital Geography Location Gangchen Kyishong 176215 Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh, India Coordinates 32°13′19″N 76°19′02″E / 32.222°N 76.3172°E / 32.222; 76.3172Coordinates: 32°13′19″N 76°19′02″E / 32.222°N 76.3172°E / 32.222; 76.3172 Services Beds 45 History Opened 1971 Links Website

The Rotary Club of Sunshine, based in Australia, participates in the financing of the program of tuberculosis control for Tibetan refugees.[1]
The Rotary Club of Sunshine, based in Australia, participates in the financing of the program of tuberculosis control for Tibetan refugees.[8]

ས་གནས།
Location

It lies between Dharamsala and McLeod Ganj, near the Men-Tsee-Khang — a location conducive to collaboration between these medicines.
It lies between Dharamsala and McLeod Ganj, near the Men-Tsee-Khang — a location conducive to collaboration between these medicines.[clarification needed]

སྨན་ཁང་།
Organization

འབྲལ་ཡོད་གནས་ཆུལ།
See also

བདེ་ལེགས་སྨན་ཁང་ནི་ཕྱི་ལོ་༡༩༧༡ ལོར་དབུས་བཅུགས་པ་རེད་The Tibetan Delek Hospital is a hospital founded in 1971 by members of the Tibetan diaspora and their supporters and located in Dharamshala in Northern India.
The Tibetan Delek Hospital is a hospital founded in 1971 by members of the Tibetan diaspora and their supporters and located in Dharamshala in Northern India.

Friends of Tibetan Delek Hospital (les amis de l'hôpital Delek) Joël Gagnon, Des ordinateurs pour les médecins de Dharamsala Doeguling Tibetan Resettlement Hospital (DTR), Mundgod SHECHEN CLINIC AND HOSPICE
Friends of Tibetan Delek Hospital (les amis de l'hôpital Delek) Joël Gagnon, Des ordinateurs pour les médecins de Dharamsala[permanent dead link] Doeguling Tibetan Resettlement Hospital (DTR), Mundgod SHECHEN CLINIC AND HOSPICE[permanent dead link]

ལོར་སྒྱུས།
History

In June 2008, the Delek hospital began a program to improve the control of tuberculosis in the Tibetan diaspora, supported by the Johns Hopkins University with the participation of Dr. Zorba Paster and Dr. Richard Chaisson,[1] and the Associazione Italiana per la Solidarietà fra i Popoli (AISPO).[2]
In June 2008, the Delek hospital began a program to improve the control of tuberculosis in the Tibetan diaspora, supported by the Johns Hopkins University with the participation of Dr. Zorba Paster and Dr. Richard Chaisson,[6] and the Associazione Italiana per la Solidarietà fra i Popoli (AISPO).[7]

ཟློས་གར་ཧྲིལ་པོ་(རྟག་ཏུ་TDཡིན་པ་)ནི་2007ལོའི་ཟླ་7ཚེས་8ཉིན་ཁ་ན་ཏའི་གློག་འཕྲིན་ཐོག་འཁྲབ་སྟོན་བྱས་པའི་ཀྲན་དབྱི་ཧྥེ་·ཕེ་ཚི་དང་ཐང་མུའུ་·མའེ་ཀེ་ལའེ་སི་གཉིས་ཀྱིས་གསར་རྩོམ་བྱས་པའི་ཁ་ན་ཏའི་འགུལ། བརྙན་འཕྲིན་ཟློས་གར་འདི་ནི་དངོས་ཡོད་ཀྱི་བརྙན་འཕྲིན་འགྲན་བསྡུར་ལེ་ཚན་ཁྲོད་ཀྱི་ཐུན་མོང་གི་སྤྱི་ཆིངས་ཀྱི་ཁྱིམ་ཚང་ཡིན་ལ་ཟུར་ཟ་ཡང་ཡིན།
HBO Max (Revival, U.S.) CBBC (Revival, U.K.) Picture format HDTV 1080p Original release Teletoon: July 8, 2007 (2007-07-08)[2][3] – present (present) Cartoon Network: June 5, 2008 (2008-06-05) – present (present) Chronology Related shows Total Drama Presents: The Ridonculous Race[4] Total DramaRama[5][6]

1906ལོའི་བརྩམས་སྒྲུང་《ནའེ་ཨེར་གྱི་ངོ་མཚར་ཆེ་བའི་ཉེན་མཆོང་》ཞེས་པ་དེ་ནི་སུའེ་ཙེར་གྱི་རྩོམ་པ་པོ་སེ་མ་·ལ་ཀེ་ལོ་ཧྥུས་བརྩམས་པའི་1906ལོའི་བརྩམས་སྒྲུང་《ཉི་ཨེར་གྱི་ངོ་མཚར་ཆེ་བའི་ཉེན་མཆོང་》ཞེས་པ་དེ། ལེ་ཚན་52འདི་ནི་1980ལོའི་ཟླ་1པོ་ནས་1981ལོའི་ཟླ་3པའི་བར་འཇར་པན་གྱི་དྲ་རྒྱའི་NHKཐོག་འཁྲབ་སྟོན་བྱས་པ་རེད། བརྙན་འཕྲིན་ཟློས་གར་འདི་ནི་ཕི་ཨེར་ལོ་ཐི་ཡིས་ཐོག་དང་པོར་ཐོན་སྐྱེད་བྱས་པ་རེད། འགུལ་རིས་འདི་མང་ཆེ་བ་ནི་མ་ཡིག་ལ་བདེན་པ་ཡིན་ཞིང་། ནེ་ཨར་སིའི་གཅེས་ཉར་བྱི་བ་ཐོན་པ་ཕུད། དེ་བྱིངས་ཚང་མས་ཝ་མོ་སི་སྨིར་ལ་སྤྲད་པའི་ནུས་པ་དེ་བས་ཀྱང་ཆེ་བ་རེད། རོལ་དབྱངས་འདི་ནི་ཅེ་ཁེ་ཡི་གཞས་གདངས་རྩོམ་མཁན་ཁ་ཨེར་·སི་ཝོ་པོ་ཏ་ཡིས་བརྩམས་པ་དང་། ཡུས་ཁི་ཏི་ཡིས་སྔར་གྱི་འཇར་པན་གྱི་རྒྱང་བསྒྲགས་དང་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་གཞན་པ་ཁ་ཤས་ལ་སྒྲ་སྐྱེད་འཕྲུལ་ཆས་འདོན་སྤྲོད་བྱས་ཡོད།
The Wonderful Adventures of Nils DVD cover of Nils no Fushigi na Tabi, from Studio Pierrot ニルスのふしぎな旅 Genre Adventure, Fantasy Anime television series Directed by Hisayuki Toriumi Studio Pierrot Licensed by NA Discotek Media Original network NHK Original run 8 January 1980 – 17 March 1981 Episodes 52

ངའི་ཆུ་གང་ན་ཡོད། འདི་ནི་ཨ་རིའི་ལས་དོན་ཁང་གི་སྐྱེ་དངོས་ཧྥེ་ཕུའུ་ཡིས་གསར་སྤེལ་བྱས་པའི་གབ་ཚིག་གི་བརྙན་ཕབ་རོལ་རྩེད་ཅིག་ཡིན་ཞིང་། ཏི་སི་ཉི་མཉམ་འགུལ་གློག་བརྙན་ཁང་གི་ཡན་ལག་ཀུང་སི་ཏི་སི་ཉི་ iOS, Android, Windows Phone နဲ့ BlackBerry 10 操作系统་སྤྱད་དེ་ཅོག་ངོས་ཀྱི་དྲ་རྒྱའི་བལྟ་ཆས་དང་སྒྲིག་ཆས་ལ་ཁྱབ་བསྒྲགས་བྱས་པ་དང་། རོལ་རྩེད་འདིའི་རུ་མི་ཚོས་ཆུ་སྲིན་ལ་ཆུ་མཁོ་སྤྲོད་བྱེད་པའི་ལམ་ཕྱོགས་ཡོད། ངའི་ཆུ་གང་ན་ཡོད། དེའི་རོལ་རྩེད་དང་དེའི་རི་མོའི་ཉམས་འགྱུར་ལ་བསྟོད་བསྔགས་ཐོབ་པ་དང་། དེའི་གཙོ་ཁྲིད་མི་སྣ་སུའེ་ཙེར་གྱིས་རང་གི་སྒུལ་བདེའི་རོལ་རྩེད་སྡེབ་སྒྲིག་བྱས་པའི་ཐོག་མའི་ཏི་སི་ཉི་ཡའི་མི་སྣ་སི་ཐན་·པའོ་ལེ་ཡིས་བཤད་པ་རེད། 2011 video game Where's My Water?
2011 video game Where's My Water?

2013 video game Temple Run 2 App icon Developer(s) Imangi Studios Publisher(s) Imangi Studios Series Temple Run Engine Unity[1] Platform(s) iOS, Android, Windows Phone, Tizen Release iOS WW: January 16, 2013[2] Android WW: January 24, 2013[3] Windows Phone WW: December 20, 2013[4] Tizen Phone WW: October 14, 2016[5] Genre(s) Endless runner Mode(s) Single-player དགོན་པའི་འཁོར་རྒྱུག་2ནི་དབྱི་མན་ཅི་གློག་བརྙན་ཁང་གིས་གསར་སྤེལ་དང་པར་སྐྲུན་བྱས་པའི་རྫོགས་མཐའ་མེད་པའི་འཁོར་རྒྱུག་གི་བརྙན་ཕབ་རོལ་རྩེད་ཅིག་ཡིན། དགོན་པའི་འགྲན་བསྡུར་གྱི་རྗེས་མཐུད་རོལ་རྩེད་འདི་ནི་ཁྱོ་ཤུག་རུ་ཁག་ཁེ་སི་·ཤེར་ཏེ་དང་ན་ཐ་ལི་ཡ་·སི་ཐ་ལི་ཡ་·སི་ཐ་ན་ནོ་ཝ་གཉིས་ཀྱིས་ཐོན་སྐྱེད་དང་། ཇུས་འགོད། ཇུས་འགོད་བཅས་བྱས་པ་ཞིག་རེད། འདི་ནི་2013ལོའི་ཟླ་1ཚེས་16ཉིན་ཉེར་སྤྱོད་ཚོང་ཁང་དུ་འགྲེམས་སྤེལ་བྱས་པ་ཞིག་ཡིན་ཞིང་། 2013ལོའི་ཟླ་1ཚེས་24ཉིན་ཀུའུ་ཀེ་རོལ་རྩེད་ཐོག་དང་ཟླ་12ཚེས་20ཉིན་གྱི་སྒེའུ་ཁུང་གི་ཁ་པར་ཨང་8པ་རེད། 2020ལོའི་ཟླ་11པར་དབྱི་མན་ཅི་གློག་བརྙན་ཁང་གིས་ཕུའུ་ཁི་དྲ་རྒྱའི་སྟེང་གི་དགོན་པའི་འཁོར་རྒྱུག་ཐེངས་གཉིས་པ་ཁྱབ་བསྒྲགས་བྱས།
2013 video game Temple Run 2 App icon Developer(s) Imangi Studios Publisher(s) Imangi Studios Series Temple Run Engine Unity[1] Platform(s) iOS, Android, Windows Phone, Tizen Release iOS WW: January 16, 2013[2] Android WW: January 24, 2013[3] Windows Phone WW: December 20, 2013[4] Tizen Phone WW: October 14, 2016[5] Genre(s) Endless runner Mode(s) Single-player

A sequel to Temple Run, the game was produced, designed and programmed by husband and wife team Keith Shepherd and Natalia Luckyanova,[1] with art by Kiril Tchangov.[1] It was released on the App Store on January 16, 2013, on Google Play on January 24,[2] and on Windows Phone 8 on Decembers 20.[3] In November 2020 Imangi Studios released Temple Run 2 for the web on Poki.[4]
A sequel to Temple Run, the game was produced, designed and programmed by husband and wife team Keith Shepherd and Natalia Luckyanova,[6] with art by Kiril Tchangov.[6] It was released on the App Store on January 16, 2013,[2] on Google Play on January 24,[3] and on Windows Phone 8 on Decembers 20.[4] In November 2020 Imangi Studios released Temple Run 2 for the web on Poki.[7]

As of June 2014, Temple Run 2 and its predecessor have been downloaded over 1 billion times.[1]
As of June 2014, Temple Run 2 and its predecessor have been downloaded over 1 billion times.[8]