Theme park rides often play on our most primal fears. Yet despite the exhilarating, high-tempo experiences offered by many attractions, according to some psychologiststhey are still perceived by our brains to be “safe” and “predictable” – so riding them becomes therapeutic. If, however, you suffer from an extreme fear of heights, it’s unlikely that skyscrapingly-tall rides induce the “good fear” that those psychologists are referring to. Instead, it’s more likely than they cause the type of fear that causes you to panic uncontrollably. If you are an extreme Acrophobia-sufferer, it may be best to avoid these 10 monster attractions…
10. New England SkyScreamer (Six Flags New England)
Spinning tower rides, which offer a high-altitude variation on the traditional “Chair-O-Plane” ride experience, have sprung up at Six Flags and Cedar Fair parks across the US in recent years. Guests are seated in chairs that dangle from a circular gondola, which spin as they rise to the top of the tower. Six Flags New England pushes the limits with its New England SkyScreamer stand at a world record 400-feet-tall.
9. Verrückt (Schlitterbahn Kansas City)
Appropriately named (“Verrückt” is the German word for “insane”), Schlitterbahn Kansas City’s new water slide is the tallest in the world at 170 feet. Those brave enough to ride it will hit an estimated speed of 65 miles per hour on their way to the bottom, before being blasted to the top of a second, shorter hill that will stand at a still-quite-tall 50 feet.
8. Oblivion (Alton Towers, UK)
Opened in 1998 at a cost of £12 million, Oblivion was the world’s first vertical drop rollercoaster. Riders board wide trains which feature two rows of eight seats, before climbing up a very steep lift hill. They are then held at the top of the 180-feet vertical drop for around four seconds, before plunging into a dark, black hole in the ground. What Oblivion lacks in length and variety, it makes up through the sheer strength of its terrifying, adrenaline-rush-inducing first drop.
7. Lex Luthor: Drop of Doom (Six Flags Magic Mountain, California)
Lex Luthor is one of Superman’s leading “bad guys”, and it truly would take an evil genius to dream up a ride like Lex Luthor: Drop of Doom. Standing at a ridiculous 415 feet tall, this drop tower is attached to the side of the Superman: Escape from Krypton roller coaster, enabling the two enemies to do battle. It’ll take you some 95 seconds to be dragged to the top of the tower, giving you plenty of time to take in one of the most amazing views on offer from any theme park ride in the world. You’ll probably be a bit preoccupied, though, thinking about the extraordinary 400-foot drop that is to follow, which will see you hit a top speed of an incredible 85 miles per hour. Don’t eat lunch before riding this one!
6. X-Scream (Stratosphere Tower, Las Vegas)
If you suffer from a fear of heights, then X-Scream is even more of a challenge than Lex Luthor: Drop of Doom. Standing at the top of the Stratosphere Tower in Las Vegas, it is more than 866 feet above the ground below. It is essentially a torture device for those with acrophobia, and consists of a 69-foot straight piece of roller coaster track. After boarding the open-top car, you’ll watch in horror as the track tilts downwards and sends you flying out over the edge of the tower. Will it catch you at the end before you plummet the your doom? You better hope so!
5. Falcon’s Fury (Busch Gardens Tampa, Florida)
Falcon’s Fury, the new drop tower at Busch Gardens Tampa, is currently the tallest freestanding drop tower in North America, standing at 335-feet-tall and sending riders plummeting towards the ground at 60 miles per hour. The ride’s chief gimmick, though, will be that it twists guests by 90 degrees so that they are facing directly downwards before they freefall down to the bottom.
4. Goliath (Six Flags Great America, Illinois)
Six Flags Great America claimed three world records when Goliath was introduced in 2014. The 180-foot, 85-degree first drop will be the longest and steepest on a wooden roller coaster. As it plummets downwards, the train hits a top speed of up to 72 miles per hour, making this monstrous creation the fastest wooden coaster, too. Look out for three inversions in its circuit, including a 180-degree zero-g roll, an inverted drop and a zero-g stall.
3. Top Thrill Dragster (Cedar Point, Ohio)
Top Thrill Dragster smashed the records for the tallest and fastest roller coasters in the world when it opened in 2003. It has since lost both of these records, but it remains an acrophobia-sufferer’s worst nightmare. The coaster uses an innovative new launch system from Intamin, which had been pioneered on the smaller Xcelerator at Knott’s Berry Farm a year earlier. It blasts riders up to a top speed of 120 miles per hour, sending them over a 420-foot “top hat” element. After plummeting back towards the ground below, you’ll be relieved to find that ride is over – there’s not much more to Top Thrill Dragster than the initial launch, but that’s more than enough.
2. Kingda Ka (Six Flags Great Adventure, New Jersey)
Towering an incredible 456 feet above Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey is Kingda Ka, a ride which put the park on the map when it opened in 2005. As well as being the world’s tallest roller coaster, it’s among the fastest, too – you’ll be blasted to a top speed of 128 miles per hour in just 3.5 seconds. Kingda Ka features a relatively simple circuit – you’ll race to the top of the gargantuan tower, before plummeting back down towards the ground and back into the station below. It may be over quickly, but this is not an experience you’ll forget in a hurry.
1. Zumanjaro: Drop of Doom (Six Flags Great Adventure, New Jersey)
Six Flags installed the world’s tallest drop tower at its Magic Mountain park in California in 2012, with Lex Luthor: Drop of Doom reaching a height of 400 feet. In 2014, the firm to repeated the trick at Six Flags Great Adventure. The park is home to the previous ride on this list, Kingda Ka. So, naturally, Six Flags bolted a drop tower on to that as well. The resulting attraction, Zumanjaro: Drop of Doom, lifts riders some 415 feet in the air, before sending them plummeting back towards the ground below at 90 miles per hour.