One Sentence Competition: Pitching Elevators - The Game Begins!

Pi on my Cake

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
In the Parks
Yes
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Just a reminder of how scoring works:
Submitting anything is worth 1 Point
Doing anything for the bonus is worth 1 Point
A Bronze or Silver Trophy is worth an extra 1 point
A Gold Trophy is worth an extra 2 Points!

If I did math wrong and you feel like your score is wrong, let me know and I'll fix it!

Any ties at the end of the game will be determined by either whoever has the most trophies and/or a fight to the death


@AceAstro - 24
@Brer Panther - 22
@major.hatter - 21
@ThemeParkPriest - 20
@Architectural Guinea Pig - 20
@Disney Warrior - 20
@imagineer97 - 20
@WaltWiz1901 - 19
@Solaris Knight - 19
@Muppetsfan#1 - 18
@Evilgidgit - 18
@OvertheHorizon - 18
@Suchomimus - 19
@Miru - 17
@cdunlap - 16
@DisneyManOne - 11
@spacemt354 - 8
@MickeyWaffleCo. - 4
@Lizzy May Bee - 4
@Disney Dad 3000 - 2
@mharrington - 2
@DisneyFan32 - 2
@FireMountain - 2
@Dark PerGron - 1

Time for the final round!
 

Pi on my Cake

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
In the Parks
Yes
Scene Ten
YOUR Main Street


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Welcome one and all to the final prompt of the One Sentence Competition: Pitching Elevators!
Feel free to join in even if you missed the previous rounds

-The Set Up-
It is the Present Day and you are in an Elevator with the head of Imagineering, Joe Disney!

Thank you all so much for joining me on this elevator ride. Surely this must have been the longest elevator ride in history? What better way to end our journey than by going back to where most Disney days begin!

Main Street U.S.A.

A land with no major attractions, but one with plenty of charm.


(Click the picture for a more detailed look at Main Streets around the world)

The original concept of Main Street USA was to be the idealized recreation of a turn of the century town. Taking heavy inspiration from Walt's own hometown of Marceline, Missouri and the hometown of Imagineer Harper Goff, Fort Collins, Colorado. Sure the turn of the century era was a unique point in America's history and development that lends itself well to a romanticized fantasy portrayal. But the truth is this theme was chosen for nostalgia sake. It takes place around 1910. Walt was born in 1901. When we walk down Main Street, we step into Walt's own nostalgic look for his childhood days.

Now, it is your turn to create a nostalgic wonderland!

-Challenge-
Pitch YOUR personal Main Street for a New Castle Park!

It does not need to be based on your home town, just base it on your nostalgia

Don't forget to include the Castle at the end of the Street


Did your family vacation by going skiing in the winter? Maybe your Main Street is a snow cover lodge

Was Five Nights at Freddy's blowing up in popularity when you were a kid? Maybe your Main Street is a Freddy Fazbear Pizzeria and the Dapper Dans are replaced with a Markiplier M&G

Did you grow up in Marceline, Missouri circa 1910? Maybe pick a different theme that's more original


-Rules-
  • I won't judge what IP you do or do not use for realism. Whether Disney owns it or not. Whether it is popular or not. All that matters is that if you use an IP it is one that matters to you. BUT if it is anything that isn't Disney keep in mind that I (and many guests) might not be familiar with it so try to focus on what makes it special and what makes it a good theme.​
  • You may use between 1 to 5 sentences and up to 1 image
  • No AI generated artwork, writing, or assistance in the brainstorming process is allowed​


-Deadline-
This project is due on Thursday, February 1st at 11:59 PM WDW Time

(8:59 PM Disneyland Time)

5 days from now (extra day since it is the finale)

-Tips-

K.I.S.S. – Keep it simple, silly. Try not to complicate or overthink things too much. It’s a simple, casual competition – there are no eliminations. Propose as you please, let your imagination soar!

-Judging Criteria-

Is it creative?

Is it (generally) realistic?

Does it fit thematically/visually?




BONUS #1: YOUR Fantasyland

Add a brief description for a Fantasy themed land for your new park!
Remember, bonuses don't effect judging. They are just for fun so have fun with this. Submitting anything for it gets your a bonus point no matter what

You may use 1 Sentence and 1 Picture

This bonus results in an automatic bonus point



BONUS #2: YOUR Frontierland/Adventureland

Add a brief description for a historical, natural, or adventurous themed land for your new park!

Remember, bonuses don't effect judging. They are just for fun so have fun with this. Submitting anything for it gets your a bonus point no matter what

You may use 1 Sentence and 1 Picture

This bonus results in ANOTHER automatic bonus point



BONUS #3: YOUR Tomorrowland

Add a brief description for a Sci-Fi or Technological themed land for your new park!

Remember, bonuses don't effect judging. They are just for fun so have fun with this. Submitting anything for it gets your a bonus point no matter what

You may use 1 Sentence and 1 Picture

This bonus results in ANOTHER automatic bonus point




Good luck everyone! If you have questions, please feel free to ask! Enjoy!
 

WaltWiz1901

Well-Known Member
Comes as partially no coincidence that this would come at around the same time I'm ironing out the final lineup for a blue sky castle park myself, so it's the perfect opportunity to give you all a taste of what I've been spending more than a year developing. Be on the lookout for a fuller writeup on this park soon...

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Imagine stepping back in time to Chicago or New York of the roaring 1920s, or perhaps into the reels of Hello, Dolly! That’s what walking down Grand Avenue feels like. In this Jazz Age town, you can hitch a ride on the El Train (short for the Elevated Electric Railway), see a swinging Broadway show at the Liberty Theater, catch a short film at the Movie House, and learn about The Walt Disney Story at the Exhibition Hall. The dazzling Cinderella’s Enchanted Castle awaits at the end of the street, a gateway into the next land worth mentioning...

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Fantasyland, the happiest kingdom of them all, is where you can rub shoulders with a wide cast of your favorite Disney characters as you stroll through a charming Storybook Village, hike through an Enchanted Forest, and get yourself lost in a topsy-turvy Wonderland.

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The main setting of Frontierland is the western town of Thunder Mesa, where guests can go on a Western River Expedition or take a wild ride in an ore cart over, under, and through Iron Mountain.

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There’s a great big beautiful tomorrow shining at the end of every day, they say, and Tomorrowland is the city of a eco-friendly, technological tomorrow.
 
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Lord Fozzinator

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
Main Street
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This new castle park will be home to the most unique Main Street out of all the park Steampunk City, a city where we are in a different kind of American town. The city is built with all metal and has large cylinders of glass on top of the buildings providing great natural inside of the stores, on the roof of the emporium is the penny arcade where you can play some retro games as you look over the land, the train actually goes through the land and goes right in front of the castle, other transportation systems also are here with the trolleys and the steampunk mobiles, to the left of the land is a show about the world of gangsters in this kid friendly/comedy show, to the right is a movie theater which shows you different Disney movies and how they are made. Steampunk City brings a new twist to the Main Street concept, where once stood a land of just shops and a train now brings a land of shops, trains, trolleys, gangsters, arcades of top of roofs, movie making, which all give way to Celestial Palace, the castle of the park.

Bonus:


Fantasyland
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We step into a world of wonder where we can go on a carpet ride in agrabah, ride Peter Pan and meet Merry Poppins in England, dance with belle and ride Seven Dwarfs Mine Train in enchanted forest, and follow Winnie the Pooh in the hundred acre wood (Those were sub sections of the land).

Frontierland
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This version of Frontierland doesn’t take us through the Bryce canyons of Utah but the Appalachian mountains in Tennessee, we can ride of a river raft through the rivers of the mountain, take a mine train through the mountains, and listen to country animals play country music.

Epcot
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Epcot is the newest version of Tomorrowland, we can ride the peoplemover through the city, walk through an exhibition hall showcasing the cities history, take a gentle ride through the city, and go on a coaster through the stars on the original space mountain showing Walt Disneys love for exploring the stars.
 
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Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
-Challenge-
Pitch YOUR personal Main Street for a New Castle Park!

It does not need to be based on your home town, just base it on your nostalgia

Don't forget to include the Castle at the end of the Street
Main Street, NJ
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I was born and spent the first two decades of my life in New Jersey, so let's try a Main Street based on the seaside boardwalks that the Garden State has in bounty. Similar in concept to Paradise Pier, this Main Street has an arcade, shops selling saltwater taffy and painted seashells, a pizzeria, and even a few rides (a small wooden roller coaster, a swing ride, a Ferris Wheel, etc.). The castle at the end would be the one from Beauty and the Beast - don't quote me on this, but that might have been the first Disney princess movie I saw.

BONUS #1: My Fantasyland
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After walking through the Beast's Castle, guests find themselves in a recreation of Belle's village from the film, then by following the right paths can visit the Seven Dwarfs' Mine, explore Wonderland with Alice, fly over Neverland with Peter Pan, search for honey with Winnie the Pooh, ride a flying elephant, and even face off against a ferocious dragon.

BONUS #2: My Adventureland
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Excitement and danger lurks around every corner in Adventureland - headlined by the World-Famous Jungle Cruise, this version of Adventureland also features the Enchanted Tiki Room, Pirates of the Caribbean, Festival of the Lion King, a treehouse built by Russell and Carl Fredricksen, and a Jungle Book-themed log flume (you may get wet!).

BONUS #3: Tomorrowland
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A bizarre science fiction world where humans, robots, and aliens live together in harmony, stepping into Tomorrowland gives guests an opportunity to fly on a rocket through outer space, build their own robot, join Star Command, race a Mars Rover on an alien speedway, or journey 20,000 leagues under the sea.
 

OvertheHorizon

Well-Known Member
Fifties America.jpg

I grew up in 1950s America (“Yeah, Joe, I’m an old guy.”) So, MY Main Street would evoke that more innocent era, but with streets lined with vintage cars next to a bakery, diner with tasty burgers, a shoe repair shop, a drug store including a soda fountain with creamy milkshakes, and other familiar stores of my youth. The “castle” in my fantasy Main Street would be a two-story school with a tall clock tower at the front that chimed on the hour.

Peter Pan.jpg
Bonus #1 – My Fantasyland would be all about flight, inspired by Disney’s Peter Pan, the first movie I saw in a theater.

Native American Village.jpg
Bonus #2 – My hometown was once home to native American tribes, and we used to hunt for arrowheads that were abundant in the area, so MY Frontierland would recreate a Native American village.

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Bonus #3 – My Tomorrowland would involve exploring our solar system and the Milky Way galaxy.
 

Disney Warrior

Well-Known Member
Main Street U.S.A.
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For the Main Street located at the newest Disney resort in Australia (or Brazil, or Canada, or Korea, or Germany, or the UK, or South Africa, or somewhere else), Imagineers decided to theme it to the historic city of Boston in Massachusetts (I have been here, though I spent pretty much all of my life in nearby RI). Unlike most other Main Streets, which are themed to the 20th century, this one is themed to the 21st century. When you walk down the street (which is obviously not as narrow as the street shown in the picture), you can hear the sounds of vehicles (based on those found in the city) heading towards Far Far Away Castle (yes, it’s themed to Shrek) and see buildings that look historic despite the land taking place in modern times. While exploring this land, you can munch on donuts (Dunkin Donuts, of course), baked beans, clam chowder, hot dogs, ice cream, and seafood. This land also has two side streets, making it easier to head to your favorite attractions in the morning and to leave the park in the evening.

Bonuses:

Adventureland:
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Unlike most other Adventurelands, this one is themed to Japan and other Asian countries (split into Chinese/Japanese and Himalayan sub-areas, no Frontierland yet), including an Asian Jungle Cruise, Indiana Jones themed to Chinese/Japanese myths, a family dark ride themed to Kung Fu Panda, a Naruto attraction, a clone of Expedition Everest, and a log flume themed to Indian/Nepali stories.

Fantasyland:

IMG_5385.jpeg

Headlined by Far Far Away Castle (which features a grand Shrek-themed dark ride), this Fantasyland is very loosely themed to medieval Europe, and it features attractions themed to many popular IPs, including Frozen, Peter Pan, Aladdin, Dumbo, Super Mario, the Legend of Zelda, the Lion King, Kingdom Hearts, and Pokemon.

Tomorrowland:
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This Tomorrowland is themed to a cyberpunk future, featuring a modernized Space Mountain (maybe a bit more thrilling than the others), a much better version of Autopia with self-driving cars, a Wreck-it-Ralph dark ride, and attractions themed to the Avengers, Sonic the Hedgehog, Mega Man, Final Fantasy, Toy Story, and Star Wars.
 
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Evilgidgit

Well-Known Member
COBBLESTONE STREET
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This version of Main Street is set within a quintessential English village, inspired by Castle Combe and Cheshire, places visited and painted by my great-grandpa. Guests enter the land by passing under a giant storybook, into the charming village square and high street, centralised around a war memorial, whilst horse carriages, open buses, and early automobiles come and go. Amongst the shops to explore are the Post Office, the Sweetie Jar sweet shop, Tea & Supper cafe, the supposedly haunted local pub called the Ram's Arms, a toy and clothes shop, and the classy new "big city" emporium. At the other end of the street lies a small park complete with a duck pond, overlooking the spectacular Snow White Enchanted Castle, set within the central hub. In a breaking of tradition, the land has two attractions -- Walt Disney's British Voyage, exploring Walt's relationship with the UK and its stories; and Miss Price's Flying Academy, a flying theatre ride based on Bedknobs and Broomsticks.

BONUSES:

FANTASYLAND
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Beyond the castle lies a kingdom of fantasy and magic, split into forests of princesses, the four seasons, toys, and shadows.

ADVENTURELAND
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Prepare to enter into a realm of untold discoveries and dangers, exploring Arabian deserts, mystical Chinese mountains, Polynesian islands and volcanoes, and uncover a lost plateau home to ancient beasts long thought to be extinct.

TOMORROWLAND
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Blast off to a world of possibilities, traveling to an alien moon that is home to the space pirate-filled Crater Town, and the futuristic, fully automated Sci-Fi City, home to racing hoverbikes, robotic gladiators, and a cyberspace rollercoaster.

And as a little extra fun:


MYSTERYLAND
Mysteryland.jpg

A brand new land set within an American harbour town where the strange mist rolling in is the least of the townsfolk's problems, compared to the tales of the old hilltop manor, the spooky lighthouse, and a dark shadowy plot looming just out of view.
 
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Solaris Knight

Well-Known Member
While I have no personal ties to it as I was born in '91 I do think that the Googie aesthetic is so retro that it's taken on a timelessness all of it's own so

MAIN STREET 1955

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The 1950's are as transitional and nostalgic as the 1900s were but are more accessible to modern audiences be it from their parents, grandpas, or pop culture osmosis. This Main Street would have the usual accoutrements such as a theater and diners but updated to take advantage of more "modern" conveniences, complete with neon lights, forming a 1950's that never was for Mickey and Friends to call home, anchored by Cinderella's Castle, representating the Disney movie that started the decade.

Bonus 1: URBAN FANTASYLAND

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Branching off from this more modern Main Street is a VERY unusual Fantasyland, one framed not by the pastoral medieval aesthetic of previous ones but an urban city all the princesses, heroes, and fairytale creatures have adapted to, inspired by works like Once Upon A Time and Fables.

FRONTIERLAND: INTERSTELLAR

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Continuing with the risky themes prior in this castle park, this Frontierland focuses on Tomorrowland concepts and themes, involving the guests as exoplanet explorers making a planet ready for more humans through participating in rides and interactive experiences similar to Galaxy's Edge.

TOMORROWLAND: SOLAR

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Since Frontierland has the conventional Tomorrowland themes, this Tomorrowland is focused on modern Solarpunk themes and elements that feel more relevant to modern audiences, taking elements from Wakanda's depiction in the MCU as well as Disneysea's Port Discovery.
 
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ThemeParkPriest

Well-Known Member
Main Street–Grand Junction
Transportation looms large in a land fittingly called Grand Junction. The M&M’s Railroad, sponsored by the candy company but standing for Minnesota & Missouri (which are 2 important states to travel between), circles the rest of the park. Going up County Road 101 is the Green Line streetcar (with public transportation ties especially to Boston and Cleveland) that provides transport from the entrance to the hub. The hub is the Northern Lights Ice Castle, a permanent fixture reminiscent of winter carnivals. Among other shops and cafes (including a pizzeria), of note is the Little Flour/Flower Bakery, which features French pastries honoring the great saint of love, St. Therese of Lisieux.

IceCastle.jpg


Fantasyland–Saintly Realm
Although time and place are generally fixed for a person, “what-ifs” take shape in this land: a boat ride that follows worldwide missionary journeys (like St. Francis Xavier), a carousel of animals (especially the ones St. Francis of Assisi preached to), and a trackless dark ride that explores a small rural community where a minister simply listened to people for hours on-end (like St. John Vianney).

St. Francis Xavier (2).jpg


Adventureland–Mission: Alaska
Alaska being the only church “mission” land in the U.S. is the theme for this land, featuring a roller coaster themed to Mount McKinley (a.k.a. Denali), a wildlife cruise (with perhaps a whale), and a simulator ride that takes guests to an island with Kodiak bears.

triplet-brown-bear-cubs-katmai-national-park.jpeg


Tomorrowland–Charity City
Away from the suburban and rural areas featured in other lands, the port of Charity City showcases a Hagrid’s-style coaster themed to people receiving help from others (e.g. soup kitchen) as well as a boat ride that shows what it’s like for a cruise ship chaplain to minister to crew and guests.

Cruise118_all_about_cruise_2015_1307_insider_access_keeping_the_faith_at_sea_father_david_gamble.jpg
 
In the Parks
No
Hilltop Haven - Main Street for Disney Hills (a park I thought of when I was ten years old but never shared with anyone till now)

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Growing up in the flatlands of Chicago suburbia, I have always romanticized hills and mountains; hence, my idea Main Street would be one that is defined by its sloping streets and majestic overlooks (using elaborate models and effects to simulate being on top of a hill). A cable-car runs up and down the main pathway, which is subtly S-shaped rather than a straight line—which lessens the grade of the incline, but the real charm is found in the side alleyways where one can discover shops and cafes more hidden away from the main pathway (a tribute to my Italian heritage—and also a place I long to visit someday). At the end of the main pathway (at the top of the hill) is a castle built into a mountain; the hub with pathways to other lands in the park is located within this structure so that no other parts of the park can be viewed from within Hilltop Haven (disconnected from the rest of the world, a true safe haven).

Bonus: My Fantasyland - Sorcerers' Glen
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Sorcerers' Glen is a Fantasyland set deep in the wooded, rocky hills beyond the Castle Mountain, home to wizards (my Merlin attraction), dwarfs, woodland creatures (typical Fantasyland attractions), but beware, the forest gets darker and the terrain rockier and more barren the deeper you travel in (the centerpiece E-Ticket, (Escape from) Fire Mountain—a roller coaster adventure starring Mickey Mouse escaping from Maleficent's dark fortress of evil).
Bonus: My Adventureland - Jungle of Mysteries
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The Jungle of Mysteries (a setting like the mountains of central Africa, with elevation changes) includes a vine swinging D-Ticket dark ride with Tarzan (suspended a la Peter Pan with more motion and speed), the classic Jungle Cruise (every Castle park needs a connection to the original, in my opinion), and Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Crimson Serpent, an EMV-jeep ride through the Jungle (mostly in a showbuilding—outdoor section can be skipped in rain a la Skull Island) in which Indy comes face to face with a creature out of his nightmares.
Bonus: My Tomorrowland - Tomorrow Valley
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Tomorrow Valley (a futuristic city set in a low basin with rocky walls surrounding it) contains adventures inspired by possibility: Rocket Rods (a ride I first thought up in 2008 merging Test Track and Rocket Rods in which you test out vehicles of the future and finish by driving around the city—Disney then did the new Test Track and created the exact visual I was picturing); a sight-seeing dark ride around the valley with the ability to make the vehicle rise and fall (a la Astro Orbiter) but on a ride track with different visuals if you are "up" or "down"; and finally, the Tomorrow Valley Fairgrounds, a sub-land featuring my Time Machine attraction from earlier (modified to its original form [ca. 2009 when I made it up] as an exhibit at the fairgrounds) and other exhibition-type attractions (which could include TRON if done as an exhibit exploring new Computer technology).
----------------------------- end of submission -----------------------------

Can I just say how awesome this competition was?! I have been on WDWMagic for 8 years and I never realized this was a part of the site! I've been armchair Imagineering since I was in 3rd grade (I still have almost all of my sketches and ideas), coming up with Disney and non-Disney parks and rides. To have a spot to share them with other people is so cool. Thanks for putting this all together, and I'm excited to get involved in other parts of this side of the forum as my schedule permits!
 

DisneyManOne

Well-Known Member
Smalltown, U.S.A.

90

The charm of New England comes to life in Smalltown, U.S.A., a new take on the iconic Main Streets that have welcomed thousands to Disneylands across the world. Smalltown takes inspiration from the six states of New England, and in some cases, replicates real-life locations -- for example, the train station is modeled after the Waterbury Amtrak Station in Vermont; and the buildings along the waterways of the Hub resemble those found in Bar Harbor, Maine. The land's main restaurant, The Fisherman's Paradise, is among these Bar Harbor-inspired buildings, offering delicious seafood like Maine lobster, clam chowder, in addition to turkey, baked beans, hot dogs, American chop suey, and dishes featuring corn, potatoes blueberries and maple syrup. There's even a version of the all-time classic The Haunted Mansion held within a mansion designed after one in Bar Harbor; alluding to the fact that Maine is home to horror icon Stephen King. And naturally, this "poor provincial town" leads up to the Beast's Castle, complete with a version of the Magic Kingdom's ever-popular Be Our Guest Restaurant, a walkthrough attraction and, naturally, a meet 'n' greet with Prince Adam and Princess Belle themselves!

~ ~ ~

BONUS: Fantasyland

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Continuing the naturalistic vibes of Smalltown, once you step past the initial castle village common in most Fantasylands, wooden bridges will take you into a massive forest setting; featuring attractions like the Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Pooh's Hunny Hunt, Alice's Curious Labyrinth, Frozen Ever After, and even an all-new dark ride themed to Tangled.

~ ~ ~

BONUS: Adventureland

Animal-Kingdom_Full_52946.jpg

Adventureland features two sub-areas: the Central/South American-inspired Puerto Aventura, which itself was inspired by the all-new Tropical Americas area of Disney's Animal Kingdom, featuring a D-ticket trackless dark ride based on Encanto, a Tiki Room equivalent starring the Three Caballeros and a new take on Indiana Jones Adventure; and Puerto Tesoro, featuring the beloved Pirates of the Caribbean and a whole host of other pirate-based experiences.

~ ~ ~

BONUS: Tomorrowland

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"it's a small world" over in Fantasyland serves as the perfect bridge to Tomorrowland, here inspired by Walt's dreams for EPCOT and the 1964 World's Fair, complete with a reborn Horizons, held within a building meant to resemble the exterior of the 1964 Carousel of Progress (pictured above), and a reborn Journey Into Imagination; whilst also featuring tried-and-true Tomorrowland classics like Star Tours and Space Mountain, as well as an all-new Avengers E-ticket held at the Stark Expo.
 

Miru

Well-Known Member
Okay then…

Mydeal Main Street

This alternate take on Main Street begins as something more akin to Mickey Avenue, albeit with a surreal mixed medium flair taking from the look of the infrastructure found outside the park, as if the infrastructure was melting away to revel Main Street. Despite this, the Mickey Avenue influences are blended with the traditional Main Street aesthetic to make it pop well and go over with fans. Surprisingly, this area also has attractions such as Muppet Vision 3D, Great Moments With Mr. Lincoln, One Man’s Dream, and the Jolly Trolley, but most of all, Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway.
 

cdunlap

Well-Known Member
DISNEY'S AMERICA (Washington DC)

New Orleans Street is the Main Street themed to the city of New Orleans, a place that every Southeastern child learns about at school as the model city of the Southeast. Guests start by wandering the streets of the French Quarter, home to shops and restaurants that can be found in the real New Orleans. The castle at the end of the New Orleans Street is Tiana's Castle, home to the main attraction of this area, Tiana's Bayou Adventure, and done in a style similar to the houses in the Garden District of New Orleans!
IMG_2901.jpeg

BONUSES:

Fantasyland takes guests into a New England village full of old stories to be told located near an old brick Colonial manor house.
IMG_2902.jpeg

Frontierland takes guests to the deserts of the ancient Southwestern United States to showcase the culture of the Ancestral Pueblo people who lived in cliff dwellings all across the Southwest, one of which guests can explore and see what archaeologists have gathered about them from their findings!
IMG_2905.jpeg

Tomorrowland is redesigned as a Gilded Age-themed Discoveryland, complete with a thrilling ride through a period-accurate factory with ZERO SAFETY REGULATIONS!!! (Simulated, Of Course!)
IMG_2904.jpeg
 

Pi on my Cake

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
In the Parks
Yes
Can I just say how awesome this competition was?! I have been on WDWMagic for 8 years and I never realized this was a part of the site! I've been armchair Imagineering since I was in 3rd grade (I still have almost all of my sketches and ideas), coming up with Disney and non-Disney parks and rides. To have a spot to share them with other people is so cool. Thanks for putting this all together, and I'm excited to get involved in other parts of this side of the forum as my schedule permits!​
That means a lot to hear. I know I've said it before but the One Sentence Competition is how I got my start here and 8 years later I still keep coming back. I've got so many great memories here and I always love how the 1SC can work as an easy entry point for the games/forum. And I'm glad to see that this game accomplished its goal of helping this community grow and helping people find a place here. Hope to see you in many games to come! (Perhaps a bigger scale competition is in your future, there may or may not be one starting in mid-march but ya didn't hear that from me) Thanks for playing!
 

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