OK, to clear things up for people who obviously haven't read much of the topic:
-If the indoor element is the worlds first (which is likely, but not confirmed):
**The tilt section can NOT be the worlds first. Togo Ultratwisters. So, no.
Equally, I'd argue that the building simply doesn't look designed to house a tilt mechanism. We have a massive hole with no slant to the bottom of it. It is literally a hole. Then on top of it, a two storey building. The train enters at the raised level, horizontally. Now, if the track were to tilt, and aim for the further back trench it would quite simply, NOT be necessary for the massive hole to exist. The hole will have cost a lot to excavate AND will constantly need to have water pumped out of it, so, it would not make sense to exist in its current form, unless it formed part of the ride area, rather than the plant area.
I firmly believe that we'll see a dropping mechanism of some sort, simply because the upper storey of the building isn't really large enough to manoevure the train in any other way, if the train is more than a few cars long.
How would you market it, you ask. Here's a few ideas off hand:
-World's first horizontal dropping coaster
-World's first 'freefall/falling coaster' (or whatever they decide to call the hybrid type)
-World's first falling track
They're all ridiculously predictable marketing targets, and all likely, after all, Oblivion was the worlds first 'vertical drop coaster'. Why not the worlds first horizontal drop coaster in the same park. Weird name perhaps and hard to visualise, but its just the sort of thing marketing execs are paid bigdollars for...[/b]