If you like roller-coasters Ceder Point is the best park to visit. Plus you can stay in the hotel right on the lake. If you want to feel like you were hit by a truck, go ride The Beast at Kings Island. The coaster is old and it will beat the hell out of you.
Cedar Point is AWESOME! Ive been there a bunch of times. The whole park is basically on an island out in Lake Erie (one of the great lakes). There is a land causeway that is just wide enough for a 2 lane road. It connects the park to the mainland.
Cedar Point, King’s Island, Wonderland, and Kings Dominion are all owned by the same parent company. Guess they like their parks big. Living in central Ohio, I’ve been to cedar point and kings island more times than I can count. Always happy when they get the love they deserve 🫶
I live in Ohio and growing up, my parents would always take us to Cedar Point every year. I have been to Kings Island about 2-3 times. But I prefer Cedar Point.
Cedar Fair is the biggest competitor to Six Flags and they compete more in quality where's Six Flags does in quantity. You will often find most of the best roller coasters in the world at Cedar Fair parks.
Kings Island is not only the largest it is one the the best run parks out there. Ride ops are fast, food is good, park is clean, shows are fun and they have a great coaster collection.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg is one of two Busch Gardens in America. The one in Williamsburg is the European one and is laid out in individual countries. You can have a beer in the Oktoberfest area in Germany, Yorkshire pudding in England and crepes with wine in France later on. It is an awesome place. The other Busch Gardens is in Tampa and it has an African theme as well as a wild animal park.
Fun fact: Disneyland Anaheim here in California was the only Disneyland/Disney Park in the WORLD that Walt Disney personally oversaw the construction for and stepped foot on.😁
Cedar Point and King's Island are owned by the same company. Ohio gets it's poor press, mostly due to our politics, but imagine living in Columbus. About a 2.5 hour drive north and you're in Cedar Point. About a 90 minute drive southwest and you're in King's Island. Both are fantastic parks to visit, but like most things today, they are expensive; especially if you purchase the ride passes.
Kings Dominion has an Eiffel Tower also. Kings Island and Kings Dominion were Sister theme parks that were once owned by Paramount Studios. They also owned Carowinds, which is in Charlotte, North Carolina.
I freaking love Six Flag Magic Mountain. Highly recommend getting any fast pass available at these parks, only way youll get close to riding all the big coasters in a day.
Disney World is actually 4 parks . They are Magic Kingdom , Epcot , Hollywood Studios , Animal Kingdom . Then you have the hotels and Disney Springs ( shops , restaurants , bars , live shows ) . If you included all 4 parks , which you should , it is by far the biggest . Wouldn't go there to visit just 1 or 2 parks .
I’m glad you mentioned all this. The last theme park video I watched on here left them a bit confused about Disney. I think it’s hard to imagine the size and entire city/county that makes up Disney World. It’s probably hard to understand until you’ve visited and seen all the magic for yourself!!! ❤
@@mlee-w664 True, and I’m sure people that live nearby just pick a park for the day and visit. But almost everybody I know (my family included) get the park hopper passes or we at least visit each park for one entire day while we’re vacationing there.
I live in Arlington, TX where Six Flags Over Texas is. It was the first Six Flags. Did you know, it’s called Six Flags to represent “The Six Flags of Texas”, the countries that have owned Texas. Spain, Mexico, France, USA, Confederacy and Texas.
Also, at kings dominion, there is a HUGE water park and HUGE amusement park and that Busch Gardens when you’re looking at first they are different countries that you can go eat in, and the stores and the souvenirs in the people will act out in those countries. So that’s another really interesting place to go. And FYI the intimidator is crazy ridiculous because the drop is so steep and so long it’s a 30 story drop almost in 90° angle and you go about 90 miles an hour! Damn, I want to go to Kings Dominion soon as it opens up and I’ll wait until the water at the water park gets a little warmer.
Walt Disney's original vision for EPCOT was quite different from what it ended up becoming. EPCOT stands for Experimental Prototype Community Of Tomorrow. He had envisioned it as a large community that pushed boundaries of technology and the way people live life. There's a classic video of Walt that you can find on youtube of him explaining his vision.
The first upside down roller coaster I have ever ridden was Lochness Monster at Busch Gardens Williamsburg. It is the yellow roller-coaster with the interlocking loops shown at the beginning. I still go to BGW whenever I get a chance.
El Toro is an Intamin prefab, meaning the track was pre-fabricated and shapes first before being assembled so its general smoother than many others. However El Toro is a bit accident prone. Every year or 2 something seems to go wrong.
@The Beesleys DisneyWorld didn't make the list because it's 4 separate parks, not one big one. EPCOT and Animal Kingdom from this list are both part of DisneyWorld, then you have Magical Kingdom (which is basically what DisneyLAND in California is) and Hollywood Studios. If you put them all together it wouldn't even be close. Orlando also has SeaWorld and Universal Studios and tons of waterparks and stuff. It's the biggest tourist city in the country by a long shot
Once upon a time Worlds of Adventure was number one. Sad story. Long history of a park just gone. It covered over 700 acres when Six Flags sold it to Cedar Fair. That park was ginormagantuan. It was closed the following year and torn down over the course of a decade. Until last year, the property sat overgrown with all the slabs, footers and walkways in tact, but now its all gone.
I live in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. In the state of Pennsylvania, I know of Kennywood Park (in Pittsburgh) and Hershey Park (in Hershey, PA). I’ve never been to Hershey Park, but I saw videos of the rides and they look crazy! These parks aren’t quite as big as the ones listed on this video!
Seeing that I live in Ohio, King's Island and Cedar Point are the only two I've been to. With James being a roller coaster junkie, Cedar Point would be the way to go. However, if you wanted a well rounded adventure, head to Cincy. King's Island, the Cincinnati Zoo and Newport Aquarium are located quite close to each other.
Don’t go home for a light! You two look marvelous no matter what the light. If you decide to visit amusement parks in America, come stay with us. We live in central Ohio and are 2-3 hours away from both Kings Island and Cedar Point. When my brother’s family visited a few years ago, they went to one park first, stayed two nights with us, then drove to the other park before returning home. You could use your day of rest to meet all of your central Ohio fans.
Rebel Yell at Kings Dominion was a cool coaster. 2 coasters racing side by side. Alas they changed the name to Racer 75 because "Oh no it has something to do with the Civil War".
I'm surprised Carowinds isn't on here but its prob not well known. Its about 408 acres. Has 14 coasters, 2 being the tallest in the world. And over 60 rides. It borders NC and SC.
I used to live in Mason, near enough to Kings Island to hear the fireworks every night at 10pm. Worth the trip, The Beast is the best wooden coaster in the world, IMHO. Full disclosure, my twin brother worked at KI one summer in the early 90’s. Worked the Tower and other rides in that area.
Great Adventure in Jackson, NJ. Kinda Ka is very fast and a lot of fun. El Toro is a wooden coaster. It closed when inspectors found structural deficiencies.
I prefer to go to kings island then cider point the lines are way to long...at cider point I used to go every summer and I would get sick from the heat. From waiting in line for the best coasters. If you ever do go get the fast pass it's abit pricey but definitely worth it.
I can't disagree that you both look a bit yellow but I personally don't mind. As long as the audio is good it's all good. I will still enjoy watching everything you post. You two make me smile and lighten my day. Don't sweat the small stuff. 😊
Grew up going to Disneyland and Six Flags Magic Mountain all the time. Six Flags was a 3 hour drive though. It’s not near anything but the Red Lobster at the exit lmao.
We grew up going to Cedar Point in Ohio. The number of incredible rides is amazing. By the way, Disneyland in California is nice, but it's kind of small compared to these parks. It's nice for little kids.
Disneyland is the single greatest park in the entire Disney chain. It has the most attractions including rides not found in other US Disney parks like Indiana Jones, the Matterhorn, Roger Rabbit’s cartoon spin, and many other smaller children’s rides. It also has the longest and best versions of Pirates of the Caribbean and the haunted mansion. This is all in addition to having the Star Wars land.
I was worried that Kings Island wasn't going to make the list. Low and behold, No. 1! This was the destination thru my High School days back in the late 70's and early 80's. We would have school trips there too. The Beast was a fantastic roller coaster. At the time of its opening, it was the world's largest and fastest wooden coaster. I miss it!
I have lived in Louisville, KY my entire life, and Kings Island was always a designation for so many of my family and friends. I even lived in Cincinnati for five years during college, and I’ve still never been. I’m ashamed! I HAVE to take my kids one day soon!!!
@@marieneu264 I currently live about 30 minutes from Disney World and was stationed for nearly 15 years, only miles from Disneyland. Never stepped for in either. Rather went to Knott's Berry Farm and the "Magic" of Disney is gone. Kings Island will remain number 1 for me.
I have lived most of my adult life in the "close enough it's almost worth the season pass" from Cedar Point; and yeah the coasters are crazy (3 out of 4 years there's a new one that breaks some crazy design records since the 1990's pretty much. They just tore down one of my favorites growing up to make room for new stuff recently; I'll wait until summer and it's replacement to decide if I'm upset or happy about it.)
sadly six flags great adventure: El Toro is close. they don't know when it's going reopen it. they were suppose open it back up this year. but on first day when park reopen for the season. they had tornado hit the theme park and El Toro got heavy damage to it. they been repair it still today :(
There are a number of chains in the US, and most of them have a different focus. Disney is _very_ family-friendly, while Universal has a blend of family-friendly and more thrilling rides. Cedar Fair and Six Flags are the chains that aim to be thrill parks, with Cedar Fair being the more high-end chain of late (though there are plenty of good Six Flags parks as well). Sea World tends to be on the family-friendly side as well, though their Busch Gardens parks pack plenty of thrills as well, and even the primary SeaWorld parks have their share of thrill rides. The main Hershend parks (Dollywood, Silver Dollar City) mostly go for the more historical feel, but their thrill rides can be found if you know where to look. And of course you have a number of independent parks, like Holiday World in southern Indiana, Hersheypark in Hershey, Pennsylvania, Lagoon in the Salt Lake region of Utah, and Silverwood in northern Idaho (in the general vicinity of Spokane, Washington). All have their own focus and purpose. For the record, the following chains are represented in this list: SeaWorld - Busch Gardens Williamsburg (10), Busch Gardens Tampa (4) Six Flags - Six Flags Magic Mountain (9), Six Flags Great Adventure & Safari (8) Cedar Fair - Kings Dominion (7), Canada's Wonderland (6), Cedar Point (5), Kings Island (1) Disney - EPCOT (3), Disney's Animal Kingdom (2) Twenty coasters _is_ a lot. It's tied for the most coasters in one park, along with Energylandia in Poland. (While Energylandia has some excellent coasters, like Zadra, Magic Mountain has a wider overall variety of coasters.)
I love Disney World (Florida) and Disneyland (California), with my favorite being Disneyland. Most people choose Disney World, but since im 72 yrs old, I prefer the original which is Disneyland. When i visited Disney World, it was only 3 yrs old, so many of the attractions were not even around. Might be fun to go visit it again.
Great Adventure had been the world's largest theme park before the pandemic. The Wild Safari which is 350 acres, was included with the theme park, but now they reverted back to a separate park that is the largest drive thru safari outside of Africa. While driving your car through is cool, I hope they bring it back as part of the Great Adventure. You have a tour guide who is better able to explain what the animals are as you see them, instead of using a prerecorded audio that tells you about animals that you may not be seeing at that point. Also people can asking the tour guide questions. I live just a half hour from Great Adventure - real New Jerseyans don't call it Six Flags -so I go all the time. Also - El Toro isn't a traditional wooden coaster. It is actually a hybrid steel and wood, so it is smooth and fast like a steel coaster. My favorite coaster at Great Adventure though is Nitro, El Toro is my second favorite.
If you want to go by the companies that run the theme parks, there are really three major ones that collectively run most of them: Cedar Fair, Six Flags, and Disney. Six Flags runs the largest number of parks, Cedar Fair runs the best parks (or, at least, the best thrill-ride/coaster parks), and Disney runs the most famous parks. Between them, these three account for most of the really notable amusement parks* in the Western hemisphere. There are also a handful of minor players, e.g., Sea World, Hershey, Lego, etc. Being from Ohio, I am obligated to point out that Cedar Point is absolutely the roller coaster capital of the world. Half a dozen of its coasters broke major world records when they were built, and Millennium Force all by itself is worth the admission price. * - Caveat: I'm excluding things that are normally treated as separate categories, such as water parks, zoos, aquariums, botanical gardens, hands-on science museums, county fairs, and miniature golf courses. All of those things do also exist, of course.
i remember when i was a kid my brother stayed the night at are cousins house and our uncle surprised them by taking them to kings island i still wish i could have gone but i was pretty little at the time I probably wouldn't have been aloud to ride most of the rides anyway.
Disney World is the largest. Separating the 4 parks, is like separating the Boroughs of New York, or the cities that make up Los Angeles. If you are in Hollywood, Beverly Hills, or Compton. You are still in a part of Los Angeles. If you are in Brooklyn, Manhattan or Queens, you are still in a part of New York City. If you are at The Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Animal Kingdom or Hollywood Studios, you are still at Disney World.
Kings Island (Ohio) was my park, Grad night (from evening all night til morning was a trip, the Beast at night was wild!). Coasters everywhere, not too big and packed like Disney but big enough.
im a season pass holder for busch gardens and seaworld in florida and my 10 (now 11) year old son wanted to go on his first big roller coaster ... he was scared s*****ss but once the ride was over he was nothing but smiles asking which was the next one we couod go on ALSO iron gwazi is no joke lolol my son and gf both blacked out on the drop ... its so fast but its amazing!!!
I grew up going to six flags magic magic mountain, at least for a lot of being a kid. We lived like 5 miles from it, always had season passes, was pretty cheap back then. Is a fun place. Highly recommend checking out if you find yourself in the area.
I do not ride them either sweetheart, we live near Cedar point and Six flags, as mom I always left schlep everybody’s stuff around while they went on rides. It’s so bloody hot you just pray for a tiny spot of shade.
Busch Gardens in Tampa totally ROCKS.
If you like roller-coasters Ceder Point is the best park to visit. Plus you can stay in the hotel right on the lake. If you want to feel like you were hit by a truck, go ride The Beast at Kings Island. The coaster is old and it will beat the hell out of you.
The Beast got retracted and its not as rough as it used to be
The guy had me at “Go Bengals!”
Cedar Point is AWESOME!
Ive been there a bunch of times. The whole park is basically on an island out in Lake Erie (one of the great lakes).
There is a land causeway that is just wide enough for a 2 lane road. It connects the park to the mainland.
I live in a nearby suburb to Kings Island. I grew up in the 70's and 80's going there. It has always been awesome.
Cedar Point is the one you go to if you want roller coasters
Cedar Point, King’s Island, Wonderland, and Kings Dominion are all owned by the same parent company. Guess they like their parks big.
Living in central Ohio, I’ve been to cedar point and kings island more times than I can count. Always happy when they get the love they deserve 🫶
Being from Ohio I’m quite lucky I’ve been to both cedar point and kings island truly an awesome experience
King's Island 🔥
Ceader Point is my favorite park. Living in Michigan it's only a 3 hour drive and we go every summer since I was a kid
Us Ohioans are spoiled. I'm halfway between Cedar Point and Kings Island. We used to go to both every year.
If that's the case may be Universal should expand to Ohio. Sounds like a growing theme park market.
I'm a bit biased for King's Island as I live in Cincinnati and have been going there my whole life.
You can take the kid to ride on the "kiddie" rides. You do not have to wait until age 13.. but big rides have height requirements.
I live in Ohio and growing up, my parents would always take us to Cedar Point every year. I have been to Kings Island about 2-3 times. But I prefer Cedar Point.
Millie mentioned Coney Island, which to put things in perspective is about 15 acres.
Don't worry about the lighting. I think we can handle a couple of days of off lighting.
To be honest, if they hadn't pointed out the lighting issues, I wouldn't have noticed. I still can't see where he says that they are orange.
They both look super bright and glowing. 😅
@@runrafarunthebestintheworld, yes, they look somewhat washed-out, but not orange.
Magic Mountain’s 20 coasters are the most of any park in the entire world.
i got to CEDER POINT every year i live close by
Cedar Fair is the biggest competitor to Six Flags and they compete more in quality where's Six Flags does in quantity. You will often find most of the best roller coasters in the world at Cedar Fair parks.
Kings Island is not only the largest it is one the the best run parks out there. Ride ops are fast, food is good, park is clean, shows are fun and they have a great coaster collection.
I grew up going to Kings Island and it's awesome. The Beast will shake the living daylights out of you.
The Beast got retracked so its not near as rough as it used to be
Cedar point is my "home" park. (Still an hour away). It opens next week and i have my season pass ready
Busch Gardens Williamsburg is one of two Busch Gardens in America. The one in Williamsburg is the European one and is laid out in individual countries. You can have a beer in the Oktoberfest area in Germany, Yorkshire pudding in England and crepes with wine in France later on. It is an awesome place. The other Busch Gardens is in Tampa and it has an African theme as well as a wild animal park.
Most of the top ten rated roller coasters are either in Cedar Point or Kings Island, both in Ohio.
Fun fact: Disneyland Anaheim here in California was the only Disneyland/Disney Park in the WORLD that Walt Disney personally oversaw the construction for and stepped foot on.😁
Cedar Point and King's Island are owned by the same company. Ohio gets it's poor press, mostly due to our politics, but imagine living in Columbus. About a 2.5 hour drive north and you're in Cedar Point. About a 90 minute drive southwest and you're in King's Island. Both are fantastic parks to visit, but like most things today, they are expensive; especially if you purchase the ride passes.
My State West Virginia Gets Even Worse Treatment 😢.
Of Places in Ohio I Love Columbus ❤.
Have Family There When I Was A Kid I Loved Going to COSI .
I'm north of Columbus so kings island is a three hour drive but cedar point is only an hour 20 min lol
I've been to most of these parks I think cedar point Park is the best hands down!
Kings Dominion has an Eiffel Tower also. Kings Island and Kings Dominion were Sister theme parks that were once owned by Paramount Studios. They also owned Carowinds, which is in Charlotte, North Carolina.
I've been to both King's Dominion in West Virginia and Carowinds which is also part on the South Carolina side as well. Great Rides at both.
@@RatzzGamez Kings Dominion is in Virginia.
@@mermaid1717 Okay it's like Carowinds kinda on the Border of Virginia and West Virginia but at least you know where I am talking about though. lol
@@RatzzGamez it's nowhere near West Virginia. It's only 20 minutes from Richmond. It's only about an hour away from Busch Gardens.
Your lighting is fine 👍❤
I freaking love Six Flag Magic Mountain. Highly recommend getting any fast pass available at these parks, only way youll get close to riding all the big coasters in a day.
Disney World is actually 4 parks . They are Magic Kingdom , Epcot , Hollywood Studios , Animal Kingdom . Then you have the hotels and Disney Springs ( shops , restaurants , bars , live shows ) . If you included all 4 parks , which you should , it is by far the biggest . Wouldn't go there to visit just 1 or 2 parks .
I remember when Typhoon Lagoon was one of the parks.
I’m glad you mentioned all this. The last theme park video I watched on here left them a bit confused about Disney. I think it’s hard to imagine the size and entire city/county that makes up Disney World. It’s probably hard to understand until you’ve visited and seen all the magic for yourself!!! ❤
I think since one ticket doesn't cover all the parks, they are counted separately
@@mlee-w664 True, and I’m sure people that live nearby just pick a park for the day and visit. But almost everybody I know (my family included) get the park hopper passes or we at least visit each park for one entire day while we’re vacationing there.
Disney World is roughly 40 square miles.
I live in Arlington, TX where Six Flags Over Texas is. It was the first Six Flags. Did you know, it’s called Six Flags to represent “The Six Flags of Texas”, the countries that have owned Texas. Spain, Mexico, France, USA, Confederacy and Texas.
I live in Arlington
@@andrewchristopher7138 small world.
I’m from Ohio and I’m so grateful to have King’s Island, it’s so much fun!
Hershey Park in Pennsylvania is a fun park, I grew up nearby to it and spent summers and school trips there.
I worked there for a season. That completely ruined it for me. But I did enjoy going as a child.
Also, at kings dominion, there is a HUGE water park and HUGE amusement park and that Busch Gardens when you’re looking at first they are different countries that you can go eat in, and the stores and the souvenirs in the people will act out in those countries. So that’s another really interesting place to go. And FYI the intimidator is crazy ridiculous because the drop is so steep and so long it’s a 30 story drop almost in 90° angle and you go about 90 miles an hour! Damn, I want to go to Kings Dominion soon as it opens up and I’ll wait until the water at the water park gets a little warmer.
Kings Island Has Always been my go-to park!
I wish “The Beach” waterpark was still Open too!
Last time I was there, there is an English Pub at Epcot.
Walt Disney's original vision for EPCOT was quite different from what it ended up becoming. EPCOT stands for Experimental Prototype Community Of Tomorrow. He had envisioned it as a large community that pushed boundaries of technology and the way people live life. There's a classic video of Walt that you can find on youtube of him explaining his vision.
Unfortunately, that vision of EPCOT died shortly after Walt did.
Nobody cares
The first upside down roller coaster I have ever ridden was Lochness Monster at Busch Gardens Williamsburg. It is the yellow roller-coaster with the interlocking loops shown at the beginning. I still go to BGW whenever I get a chance.
El Toro is an Intamin prefab, meaning the track was pre-fabricated and shapes first before being assembled so its general smoother than many others. However El Toro is a bit accident prone. Every year or 2 something seems to go wrong.
And Intimidator 305 used to be so intense that people blacked out on it, so they had to extend the helix to make it less intense.
Maybe hang a white sheet in front of the window to diffuse the light coming in from the window, if you can.
@The Beesleys DisneyWorld didn't make the list because it's 4 separate parks, not one big one. EPCOT and Animal Kingdom from this list are both part of DisneyWorld, then you have Magical Kingdom (which is basically what DisneyLAND in California is) and Hollywood Studios. If you put them all together it wouldn't even be close. Orlando also has SeaWorld and Universal Studios and tons of waterparks and stuff. It's the biggest tourist city in the country by a long shot
Kings Island is still my favorite theme park and I first went there the summer it opened.
Once upon a time Worlds of Adventure was number one. Sad story. Long history of a park just gone.
It covered over 700 acres when Six Flags sold it to Cedar Fair. That park was ginormagantuan. It was closed the following year and torn down over the course of a decade. Until last year, the property sat overgrown with all the slabs, footers and walkways in tact, but now its all gone.
I live in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. In the state of Pennsylvania, I know of Kennywood Park (in Pittsburgh) and Hershey Park (in Hershey, PA). I’ve never been to Hershey Park, but I saw videos of the rides and they look crazy! These parks aren’t quite as big as the ones listed on this video!
I miss the school trips to Kennywood Park. That was back in the 80s.
Seeing that I live in Ohio, King's Island and Cedar Point are the only two I've been to. With James being a roller coaster junkie, Cedar Point would be the way to go. However, if you wanted a well rounded adventure, head to Cincy. King's Island, the Cincinnati Zoo and Newport Aquarium are located quite close to each other.
Don’t go home for a light! You two look marvelous no matter what the light.
If you decide to visit amusement parks in America, come stay with us. We live in central Ohio and are 2-3 hours away from both Kings Island and Cedar Point. When my brother’s family visited a few years ago, they went to one park first, stayed two nights with us, then drove to the other park before returning home. You could use your day of rest to meet all of your central Ohio fans.
Rebel Yell at Kings Dominion was a cool coaster. 2 coasters racing side by side. Alas they changed the name to Racer 75 because "Oh no it has something to do with the Civil War".
I'm surprised Carowinds isn't on here but its prob not well known. Its about 408 acres. Has 14 coasters, 2 being the tallest in the world. And over 60 rides. It borders NC and SC.
I used to live in Mason, near enough to Kings Island to hear the fireworks every night at 10pm. Worth the trip, The Beast is the best wooden coaster in the world, IMHO.
Full disclosure, my twin brother worked at KI one summer in the early 90’s. Worked the Tower and other rides in that area.
Great Adventure in Jackson, NJ. Kinda Ka is very fast and a lot of fun. El Toro is a wooden coaster. It closed when inspectors found structural deficiencies.
Something to tell your Wife. I’m 63 and still Ride Rollercoasters. Cedar Point is my home park.
aww do more of these love you guys . do the best rollercoaster
Used to live near Magic Mountain…and my kids always got a season pass…every year!!
The lighting you have is fine. Just roll with it.
I prefer to go to kings island then cider point the lines are way to long...at cider point I used to go every summer and I would get sick from the heat. From waiting in line for the best coasters. If you ever do go get the fast pass it's abit pricey but definitely worth it.
I grew up 6o minutes away from Kings Island. Great park! I've been there around 20 times. I've been to 4 out of the top 10 parks.
Don't worry about the lighting!!!! You guys look fine!!!!! Thanks for this video, as always it was cool!!!
The One I love the best is Bush Gardens in Willamsburg Virginia. So much fun and they have the Budwiser Clydsdales
I can't disagree that you both look a bit yellow but I personally don't mind. As long as the audio is good it's all good. I will still enjoy watching everything you post. You two make me smile and lighten my day. Don't sweat the small stuff. 😊
Grew up going to Disneyland and Six Flags Magic Mountain all the time. Six Flags was a 3 hour drive though. It’s not near anything but the Red Lobster at the exit lmao.
Grew up going to Cedar Point, probably have been there a dozen times. But that was the Eighties.
Cedar point may not be the biggest by his standards, but it's the Gold standard for parks. Ask anyone who has been.
We grew up going to Cedar Point in Ohio. The number of incredible rides is amazing. By the way, Disneyland in California is nice, but it's kind of small compared to these parks. It's nice for little kids.
Add in California Adventure and do both.😊
Disneyland is the single greatest park in the entire Disney chain. It has the most attractions including rides not found in other US Disney parks like Indiana Jones, the Matterhorn, Roger Rabbit’s cartoon spin, and many other smaller children’s rides. It also has the longest and best versions of Pirates of the Caribbean and the haunted mansion. This is all in addition to having the Star Wars land.
I Live About 4 Hours From Cincinnati Love The Zoo King's Island & The Botanical Gardens.
@@Perfectly_Cromulent351 Disneyland's Haunted Mansion is *shorter* than the other versions. It's missing multiple scenes.
I was worried that Kings Island wasn't going to make the list. Low and behold, No. 1! This was the destination thru my High School days back in the late 70's and early 80's. We would have school trips there too. The Beast was a fantastic roller coaster. At the time of its opening, it was the world's largest and fastest wooden coaster. I miss it!
I have lived in Louisville, KY my entire life, and Kings Island was always a designation for so many of my family and friends. I even lived in Cincinnati for five years during college, and I’ve still never been. I’m ashamed! I HAVE to take my kids one day soon!!!
@@marieneu264 I currently live about 30 minutes from Disney World and was stationed for nearly 15 years, only miles from Disneyland. Never stepped for in either. Rather went to Knott's Berry Farm and the "Magic" of Disney is gone. Kings Island will remain number 1 for me.
Kings Island's the second-largest in Ohio Cedar Point's the largest
I have lived most of my adult life in the "close enough it's almost worth the season pass" from Cedar Point; and yeah the coasters are crazy (3 out of 4 years there's a new one that breaks some crazy design records since the 1990's pretty much. They just tore down one of my favorites growing up to make room for new stuff recently; I'll wait until summer and it's replacement to decide if I'm upset or happy about it.)
King’s Island is my
Home park. Such a great place! Going there this weekend 🎢🤘🏻
Kings Dominion is my home park and is fun and well done
Magic Mountain has more roller coasters then any other park in the world
sadly six flags great adventure: El Toro is close. they don't know when it's going reopen it. they were suppose open it back up this year. but on first day when park reopen for the season. they had tornado hit the theme park and El Toro got heavy damage to it. they been repair it still today :(
Woo-Hoo Kings Island is #1 I have been going here for 40+ years ❤ I live 20 minutes from the park. and their blue ice cream is iconic 😍 Go OHIO 🎉
the light is fine
There are a number of chains in the US, and most of them have a different focus. Disney is _very_ family-friendly, while Universal has a blend of family-friendly and more thrilling rides. Cedar Fair and Six Flags are the chains that aim to be thrill parks, with Cedar Fair being the more high-end chain of late (though there are plenty of good Six Flags parks as well). Sea World tends to be on the family-friendly side as well, though their Busch Gardens parks pack plenty of thrills as well, and even the primary SeaWorld parks have their share of thrill rides. The main Hershend parks (Dollywood, Silver Dollar City) mostly go for the more historical feel, but their thrill rides can be found if you know where to look.
And of course you have a number of independent parks, like Holiday World in southern Indiana, Hersheypark in Hershey, Pennsylvania, Lagoon in the Salt Lake region of Utah, and Silverwood in northern Idaho (in the general vicinity of Spokane, Washington). All have their own focus and purpose.
For the record, the following chains are represented in this list:
SeaWorld - Busch Gardens Williamsburg (10), Busch Gardens Tampa (4)
Six Flags - Six Flags Magic Mountain (9), Six Flags Great Adventure & Safari (8)
Cedar Fair - Kings Dominion (7), Canada's Wonderland (6), Cedar Point (5), Kings Island (1)
Disney - EPCOT (3), Disney's Animal Kingdom (2)
Twenty coasters _is_ a lot. It's tied for the most coasters in one park, along with Energylandia in Poland. (While Energylandia has some excellent coasters, like Zadra, Magic Mountain has a wider overall variety of coasters.)
I love Disney World (Florida) and Disneyland (California), with my favorite being Disneyland. Most people choose Disney World, but since im 72 yrs old, I prefer the original which is Disneyland. When i visited Disney World, it was only 3 yrs old, so many of the attractions were not even around. Might be fun to go visit it again.
I live halfway between Busch Gardens in Williamsburg and Kings Dominion in Doswell Virginia
Great Adventure had been the world's largest theme park before the pandemic. The Wild Safari which is 350 acres, was included with the theme park, but now they reverted back to a separate park that is the largest drive thru safari outside of Africa.
While driving your car through is cool, I hope they bring it back as part of the Great Adventure. You have a tour guide who is better able to explain what the animals are as you see them, instead of using a prerecorded audio that tells you about animals that you may not be seeing at that point. Also people can asking the tour guide questions.
I live just a half hour from Great Adventure - real New Jerseyans don't call it Six Flags -so I go all the time.
Also - El Toro isn't a traditional wooden coaster. It is actually a hybrid steel and wood, so it is smooth and fast like a steel coaster. My favorite coaster at Great Adventure though is Nitro, El Toro is my second favorite.
If you want to go by the companies that run the theme parks, there are really three major ones that collectively run most of them: Cedar Fair, Six Flags, and Disney. Six Flags runs the largest number of parks, Cedar Fair runs the best parks (or, at least, the best thrill-ride/coaster parks), and Disney runs the most famous parks. Between them, these three account for most of the really notable amusement parks* in the Western hemisphere.
There are also a handful of minor players, e.g., Sea World, Hershey, Lego, etc.
Being from Ohio, I am obligated to point out that Cedar Point is absolutely the roller coaster capital of the world. Half a dozen of its coasters broke major world records when they were built, and Millennium Force all by itself is worth the admission price.
* - Caveat: I'm excluding things that are normally treated as separate categories, such as water parks, zoos, aquariums, botanical gardens, hands-on science museums, county fairs, and miniature golf courses. All of those things do also exist, of course.
i remember when i was a kid my brother stayed the night at are cousins house and our uncle surprised them by taking them to kings island i still wish i could have gone but i was pretty little at the time I probably wouldn't have been aloud to ride most of the rides anyway.
Disney World is the largest. Separating the 4 parks, is like separating the Boroughs of New York, or the cities that make up Los Angeles. If you are in Hollywood, Beverly Hills, or Compton. You are still in a part of Los Angeles. If you are in Brooklyn, Manhattan or Queens, you are still in a part of New York City. If you are at The Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Animal Kingdom or Hollywood Studios, you are still at Disney World.
Lol this coloring is better. Doesn’t look orange at all.
Kings Island (Ohio) was my park, Grad night (from evening all night til morning was a trip, the Beast at night was wild!). Coasters everywhere, not too big and packed like Disney but big enough.
King's Island is my favorite park. In my opinion, it beats Cedar Point as Ohio's best park because it's family friendly and relaxing.
Love Kings Island!
I got to ride an elephant at bush gardens Tampa! The elephant in front of us almost slipped on some elephant poo.
Epcot is the one with the giant ball
King Cedar Point
im a season pass holder for busch gardens and seaworld in florida and my 10 (now 11) year old son wanted to go on his first big roller coaster ... he was scared s*****ss but once the ride was over he was nothing but smiles asking which was the next one we couod go on ALSO iron gwazi is no joke lolol my son and gf both blacked out on the drop ... its so fast but its amazing!!!
EPCOT is my favorite theme park.
Disney world is four theme parks epcot, hollywood studios, animal kingdom, and magic kingdom...
I grew up going to six flags magic magic mountain, at least for a lot of being a kid. We lived like 5 miles from it, always had season passes, was pretty cheap back then. Is a fun place. Highly recommend checking out if you find yourself in the area.
Disney's in house ride construction is called WED productions often choosing the old Arrow company to work with.
James, I hope your footballers won. What is your team?
You should react to the top 50 best roller coasters in the world. It'd be a fun watch for you to see some of those rides.
I live in Ohio and have been to both Kings Island and Cedar Point many, many times : )P They are amazing!!!!
I live a half hour from number 9.
10:48 Epcot is Disney, you’re right!!!
It looks fine
Also Theme Parks and Amusement Parks are different. Disney is a Theme Park. Cedar point is an Amusement Park.
It's fine. And yall sound 👍
I do not ride them either sweetheart, we live near Cedar point and Six flags, as mom I always left schlep everybody’s stuff around while they went on rides. It’s so bloody hot you just pray for a tiny spot of shade.