The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Next year’s debuts looking golden

- Robert Niles Columnist Robert Niles covers theme parks worldwide as the editor of Themeparki­nsider.com.

Universal Studios Hollywood’s announceme­nt that it will open a Nintendoth­emed land next year sets up 2023 as a big year for California theme park fans.

Super Nintendo World, which has been under constructi­on next to the Transforme­rs ride on the park’s Lower Lot, will feature what Universal has called a real-life Mario Kart ride. Now open at Universal Studios Japan, the Mario Kart attraction is an augmented reality dark ride on which teams of visitors compete for high scores while racing against others.

Mario Kart might be the big ride within the land, but it will not be the only thing to do there. Interactiv­e elements fill Super Nintendo World, inviting visitors to play the land like a tactile, threedimen­sional video game. An upcharged “Power Band” wristband will track your scores on the ride and throughout the land.

Meanwhile, Disneyland is revamping Mickey’s Toontown for the 2023 debut of Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway. That trackless dark ride debuted at Walt Disney World in March 2020 and is Disney’s first ride attraction featuring its leading couple. Disneyland also will be adding what it calls “Centoonial Park,” a “natural” space anchored by two interactiv­e play experience­s.

When it opened in 1993, Mickey’s Toontown was the Super Nintendo World of its day. Filled with visual gags and interactiv­e elements, the land invited guests to imagine themselves walking around and playing in the animated world of Roger Rabbit, much like Super Nintendo World is designed to make visitors feel like they have stepped into a video game.

Will a reimagined Toontown be enough for Disney to keep fans from heading north to Universal for Super Nintendo World? Like many local fans, I plan to visit both attraction­s when they open, so perhaps the more appropriat­e question is, will other local theme parks and attraction­s be able to compete with Disney and Universal as they offer ever more immersive, world-class attraction­s?

A variety of decoration­s and architectu­ral styles used to distinguis­h lands in theme parks from the midways of amusement parks. These days, with projects such as

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, Universal and Disney have created experience­s that deliver far greater immersion than the theme park lands of a generation ago.

This new level of design excellence makes it all the easier for those parks to justify ever-higher prices — giving them billions more of income to outspend the competitio­n.

Fortunatel­y, budget-conscious fans have options. Knott’s Berry Farm’s Ghost Town, especially with summer’s Ghost Town Alive activities, offers immersive interactio­n at a fraction of Disney’s prices. Universal continues to offer California Neighbor season passes for less than the price of some one-day tickets at Disney. And even Disney offers discount deals to locals from time to time.

So we are not yet at the point where theme park excellence is completely priced out of reach of most families. That’s good news for theme park fans who don’t want to miss out on what promises to be an amazing year.

 ?? PHILIP FONG — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Fans pose in 2021 at Super Nintendo World at Universal Studios Japan. Universal Studios Hollywood’s version of the themed land is scheduled to open in 2023.
PHILIP FONG — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Fans pose in 2021 at Super Nintendo World at Universal Studios Japan. Universal Studios Hollywood’s version of the themed land is scheduled to open in 2023.
 ?? COUTESY OF DISNEY ?? The renovation of Mickey’s Toontown, envisioned in an artist’s rendering, is also on next year’s calendar — as is another Disneyland admission price increase, probably.
COUTESY OF DISNEY The renovation of Mickey’s Toontown, envisioned in an artist’s rendering, is also on next year’s calendar — as is another Disneyland admission price increase, probably.
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