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Defunct attractions where you differ from the common posthumous consensus

Matt N

CF Legend
Hi guys. Last year was an interesting year for ride closures in the theme park industry, with quite a few notable names departing for that big theme park in the sky in 2024. Kingda Ka was probably the crown jewel of these notable closures, but there were some other notable ones in the USA, such as Green Lantern, Anaconda and Nighthawk, and closer to home (albeit not particularly comparable in terms of scale), The Blade also operated for the final time at Alton Towers in 2024 after over 40 years in the lineup. Over my time socialising in theme park enthusiast circles, I’ve noticed that the closure of a ride can tend to bring out… extremes of emotion regarding it. When a ride closes, general opinion often pivots towards either idolising it and making it out to be a “lost legend” of sorts or severely criticising it and expressing words to the effect of “good riddance to bad rubbish”. With this in mind, I’d be intrigued to know; are there any defunct attractions where you differ from the common consensus that’s developed around them in death? Is there a defunct ride that goes down in legend that you didn’t think was all that? Or is there a defunct ride that history doesn’t look back kindly on that you actually really liked?

I’ll get the ball rolling with a couple of my own answers.

In terms of a defunct ride that goes down in legend that I didn’t think was all that, I’d firstly bring Dragon Challenge at Universal’s Islands of Adventure into the conversation. A lot of people seem to look back on this duo of duelling B&M inverts really fondly, I’ve sometimes heard Hagrid’s compared unfavourably to them, and they generally seem to be perceived as legends of the defunct coaster world. But personally, I didn’t massively rate either side. While I admittedly only rode either side once and did not get to experience them duelling, I thought they were easily the two weakest B&M inverts I’ve ridden by some distance. I didn’t think they were bad rides per se, but I wouldn’t really extend my praise beyond “average”. I don’t particularly miss them, I infinitely prefer Hagrid’s, and I don’t think they personally lived up to their legendary posthumous reputation for me.

I’m going to go quite Alton Towers centric for my next two answers; with it being my most visited park and the park I’ve been going to annually since I was 6, it’s the park where I’ve seen the most attractions come and go by some distance.

Maybe “goes down in legend” is a bit of an exaggeration for this one, but a warmly remembered defunct ride at Alton Towers that I didn’t think was all that, perhaps controversially, was The Flume. I never got the point of the section in the woods that seemed never-ending, and I never found it anything overly remarkable as log flumes go. I definitely thought its time had come by the time it went, and I infinitely prefer Wicker Man. I didn’t ride it very much (my last ride on The Flume was in 2014, and I seem to remember that being my first ride on it for a couple of years at the time), whereas Congo River Rapids used to be a staple every visit when we went to Alton for weekends when I was a child, which I think says it all, really!

On the flip side of this, a defunct Alton ride that was panned both posthumously and in life that I actually have very fond childhood memories of is Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. This seems to be utterly panned by enthusiasts, but I absolutely loved it as a child and always found it such a magical ride, with great theming and an awesome elevator section! It was one of the key rides me and my mum used to love riding together when I wasn’t big enough for the big rides and my sister was off riding those with my dad, and of all the rides I did as a child at Alton, Charlie is one of the ones I have some of the fondest memories from. Enthusiasts might pan it, but I’ll always have a soft spot for it, personally.

But I’d be keen to know; what are some defunct attractions that you differ from the common consensus on? Are there any defunct rides that you loved and everyone else hated? Or are there any that everyone else loved and you didn’t overly rate?
 
The pre-Wizarding World Duelling Dragons were elite! I was mesmerised by the duelling loops and dragon sculptures on my first IoA visits way back in 2000 and 2005.
 
I don't think I differ massively from the consensus in this matter. That said...

The Ultimate - Admittedly, I only had some rides on this in 1996, and no other year. I loved the ambition of it, and thought it was surely going to be one of the best rides in the UK. However, it's hard to explain, but it just didn't really feel like a roller coaster to me. The drops weren't quite what I expected, the bunny hops didn't feel like bunny hops etc. In a way, it's good, as I don't think the park it was in is beyond hope. I always thought they could get a small CCI (now Gravity Group, I suppose) and they wouldn't be any worse off.

Blackpool Wild Mouse - OK, this is a bit of a cheat. It was a great ride, but I can imagine why they might have removed it. I don't think its removal was anything like as outrageous as the Cyclone, for example.

Runaway Coaster, Folkestone - Another cheat, as I don't think it was a great ride. It's more the fact that it's been a bit forgotten. I can't believe we had a wooden side-friction coaster in Kent, relatively recently, that genuinely felt different to any other wooden coaster I've been on, and it's almost like it was never there.

Southport Cyclone - I think the consensus is that it was a good/average ride, but I think it was a great ride. Smooth with good airtime... to me it was a UK Top 3 woodie.

Would love to have ridden the Southend Cyclone, Belle Vue Bobs, Steel Stella and Morecambe Cyclone, but unfortunately didn't.

As for dark rides, I thought Toyland Tours, 5th Dimension, Tinkaboo Sweet Factory and Voyage to Aladdin's Cave were all generally better than remembered (if remembered much at all).
 
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Whilst I don't think I'll miss it that much, as I'm hoping for a superior replacement, I did enjoy Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit.
 
Black Hole at Alton Towers was incredibly mediocre.

Ok, to be fair, I loved it when I was a kid. Riding it later, not so much. The Princess Diana levels of national grief over its closure were unwarranted.
 
I felt like one of the few people excited to see Splash Mountain change into Tianas. I rode Splash for the first time as an adult, so I guess I didn't have the same nostalgia for the ride. However, the way some people were reacting was ridiculous.
 
On the flip side of this, a defunct Alton ride that was panned both posthumously and in life that I actually have very fond childhood memories of is Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. This seems to be utterly panned by enthusiasts, but I absolutely loved it as a child and always found it such a magical ride, with great theming and an awesome elevator section! It was one of the key rides me and my mum used to love riding together when I wasn’t big enough for the big rides and my sister was off riding those with my dad, and of all the rides I did as a child at Alton, Charlie is one of the ones I have some of the fondest memories from. Enthusiasts might pan it, but I’ll always have a soft spot for it, personally.
Feel the same way about Charlie and the Chocolate factory at AT. I was terrified of coasters until I was about 14 but still absolutely loved going to towers and this was the best one to do with my Dad. (also loved the pirate ships even in rainy October, much to my Dad's disappointment)

I have a weird soft spot for the objectively terrible Br'er Rabbit's Rap Party. My family and I used to go to Pembrokeshire once a year and take a day trip to Oakwood. From me being about 2 to when I was 19. My older brothers would go off with my Dad to lap Megafobia & Bounce. While me and my mum would go on Br'er Rabbit about 18 times. I absolutely loved it, which is hilarious to me now considering how it's become infamous for being creepy and talked about a lot in submechanophobia circles (see below).

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One from recently that I'm not sure even has a general consensus is Curious George Goes to Town at Universal Studios. Again, I didn't like big rides when I was younger but I LOVED wet play areas like this one, Camp Jurassic & the massively underrated If I Ran the Zoo at IOA. It had so much you could interact with, I would spend hours there despite the theming being rubbish. While the new Kung Fu Panda area is visually better (and I assume is safer than a playground exclusively made of concrete and steel) it just looks boring to play in, which is such a shame.

I think when it comes to coasters, I'm too new an enthusiast to have that many defunct so I guess being a contrarian on more closed rides is something to look forward to.
 
Volcano wasn't really that great of a coaster. Sure the gimmick was cool but that's all it was, a gimmick. It was never worth the long wait times it pulled and after the launch out of the volcano, the ride just meanders to the end. Yeah the 80 ft drop was neat but the ride hit the brakes immediately after. If you want a mediocre launch coaster with multiple launches and a gimmick, Darkoaster is an hour south of KD.
 
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