I suppose if we're going to have like three different sections of this Toontown - the city, the suburbs, and the forest - each neighborhood could have its own anchoring attraction and we could organize our project around that. Are we putting the
Ducktales ride in the suburb part of the area?
Of all the TV shows that we've brainstormed so far, I have the most (and most recent) experience with
Rick and Morty, Gravity Falls and
Adventure Time, so I have a couple ideas for those ones:
I suppose the most sensible way to approach a
Rick and Morty attraction is by parodying other stuff, because that's how they do it on the show. Pretty sure
@mickeyfan5534 mentioned the "Anatomy Park" episode as an inspiration, and I think that's a great place to start. We could have a museum facade in the urban section that looks like an opening-day Disneyland Tomorrowland exhibit, like the Hall of Chemistry or something, and inside have an omnimover ride that's a perverse imitation of Adventure thru Inner Space, where Rick is shrinking down tourists and promising to show them a menagerie of diseases inside the human body, but instead he's actually up to something more sinister. I don't know, still thinking about that one. The exhibit building that precedes the ride could also be a
Rick and Morty thing and function as one of the walk-through experiences somebody was talking about earlier, maybe like a silly/existential/nihilist version of Innoventions.
A
Gravity Falls attraction could look like a grimy, low-budget amusement park spook house ride in the forest part of the land that turns out to actually be haunted for real. I think there's like a episode of the show that's like
House of Wax where the kids find their uncle's old wax museum but the figures are alive and trying to kill people. We could do it like that but with ride figures.
I'm trying to think of a very good idea for
Adventure Time but I'm not there yet.
I can write out a treatment for any and all of these attractions if we use them. What do you all think?
---TrevorA