Main Street: A more surrealist take on Main Street with Dali-esque visuals showing the infrastructure melting away into the Main Street aesthetic and then warping into each land. This is also reflected in the fact there’s a safari jeep attraction (replacing the usual Railroad/Monorail) to serve as the main transit of the park, called the “Disney Venture Service” that takes you through each land, homaging Kilimanjaro Safaris. Muppet Vision 3D can also be found here, with an exhibit on the history and impact of Jim Henson also present. One Man’s Dream is here as well, as is Mitsukoshi, replacing the Emporium. There’s also Stan and George, a store dedicated to Disney’s golden boys. The castle at the end is Ariel’s, with a walkthrough inside, a shop dedicated to the Princesses (especially Ariel of course), as well as a meet and greet area.
Pristine Frontiers: Paradise untouched by man… this Adventureland has little to no human influence, moreso resembling Animal Kingdom down to the inclusion of real animals as major attractions; walk down the Maharajah Jungle Trek, visit the Enchanted Tiki Room: Under New Management (with even more “New Management”, such as an Eagle-Mode Maui, Kevin and her babies from Up, and Dumbo’s crow buddies), play in King Louie’s Jungle Gym, race boats to victory on Micro Jungle Cruise, or tackle Baloo’s Grizzly River Run, which now spits riders out from inside the bear’s mouth. Plus there’s a Rainforest Cafe. And yes you also see the real animals from your safari vehicles, and to an extent in GRR.
100 Acre Wood: For those seeking a closer comfort, one of Disney’s biggest IPs forms a designated kids area, featuring The Tigger Ride (a ride based on The Tigger Movie), Backson Putt (mini-golf), Friends & Relations Petting Farm, Bumper Carrots (bumper cars), When Piglets Fly (our requisite Dumbo spinner), and Hunny Pot Spin (teacups), then have some table service at Rabbit’s Farm Fresh Restaurant or sweets at the Hunny Tree. Of course, there are lots of meetable characters, especially in Pooh’s House, a walkthrough area.
Discovery Bay: A steampunk-inspired, Da Vinci-inspired area that reflects both a past and a future that never was at the same time. The E-Ticket is Maelstrom; an intense water coaster where your steampunk ships get entangled in Norse Mythology’s world, swirling thru a literal maelstrom to start the ride experience. A less intense, but still beautiful experience would be Submarine Voyage, a Jules Verne-inspired voyage to the deep sea, complete with a silly sea serpent encounter at the end (but not before the terrifying Leviathan, yes from Atlantis). There’s also a tour of a tortilla factory to do before tackling the flat ride known as Treasure Trekkers as well as our resident show The Timekeeper. Animal exhibits also continue with the Metazoa Observatorium.
Haunted Shore: The dark contrast to Discovery Bay, Haunted Shore covers two of the most popular park original IPs in one. First, enter the Geist Cave, our more organic take on the Haunted Mansion. (Yes, there’s a “Holiday” mode) Then steel yourself for the biggest and most intense PoTC ever; Pirates of Great Water, which is pretty much Splash but with Pirates. You can also explore Davy Jones’s Labyrinth, or ride the Ghost Rider Adventure, a motorcycle-based simulator ride with physical elements, based on the Marvel character. Fugit Hora is the main “Mansion” centric store, whereas for the Pirates it’s Port Royal Treasury. Then go eat and drink and be merry at the Drunken Sailor tavern.
Starland: The Fantasyland equivalent; basically everything under the “main” Disney-Pixar banner lives here as dark rides. Why “Starland”? A lot more sci-fi franchises pop up here, like Lilo & Stitch being the Peter Pan’s Flight stand-in, and the place also evokes the Studio Parks in terms of design, complete with The Magic of Disney Animation (yes, a functional studio) and The Great TV Show Ride, a sequel to The Great Movie Ride. Also present as dark rides are A Goofy Movie, Frozen II (of course), The Lion King, WALL-E, and Finding Nemo (different from the Epcot or ODL versions). There’s also a junior launched coaster in Stitch’s Rocket Run, which zips both in and out of the building and into the trees as well. In the trees, there is also a Brave walkthrough attraction.
Endless Zone: A-Ha! If you’re looking for Marvel/Lucasfilm, have we got a show for you. Literally, if you take the Marvel vs. Capcom Stunt Spectacular for a spin. You can also go on a slow moving Bantha March ride, but not before you get clearance from Tusken Raiders (if Jabba was still around, no way). More exiting, however, is the Podrace a launched coaster/simulator/dark ride hybrid.
Parades: This park has two parades, SpectroMagic as the nighttime parade, plus a new daytime parade called Once Upon a Resort.