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A Park of Prototypes

Poseidon at Europa Park
Image: Europa Park

Europa Park has plenty to offer outside of its attractions, but I'd be lying if I said the ride lineup had nothing to do with my listing Europa Park on my bucket list. The park boasts 13 roller coasters, each more charming, unique, and thrilling as the last. 

When Franz Mack opened Europa Park in 1975, he envisioned it as a place where his family's manufacturing and innovation could be put on display, with full creative and financial control. That's why so many of Mack's attractions were first built at Europa Park. It was a testing ground, a billion-dollar showroom.

Mack Rides may be most famous for their spinning coasters, of which you can find the first at Europa Park. Themed around Russian space travel and one of the longest (in ride time, not track length) coasters in the world, Euro-Mir is Mack's inaugural spinning coaster. Later, rides like Cobra's Curse at Busch Gardens Tampa and Time Traveler at Silver Dollar City would expand upon this idea in intricate theming and elements, but that's all thanks to the ambition behind Euro-Mir. 

Mack Rides is also known for its waters coasters, which can be found in the states at SeaWorld parks. These attractions are hybrid models, featuring sometimes short and sometimes extended moments of roller coaster-like twists and bends, most often followed by a splash-down of some sort, soaking guests. Two of these models can be found at Europa Park. Poseidon, the earlier of the two and one of the manufacturer's first of the model, is dubbed by the park as, "a truly adventurous trip through Greek mythology." Later, in the Portugal area of the park, Europa Park would add Atlantica SuperSplash. This water coaster, a near-exact clone of the Journey to Atlantis found at SeaWorld San Antonio, its only difference being a bunny hill after the main drop. It seems strange to the casual observer that one park would have two water coasters, but these two rides have very different goals they're looking to accomplish. Where Poseidon focuses more on the roller coaster elements of the water coaster, providing a well-rounded and well-themed ride experience, Atlantica SuperSplash has one goal in mind: to get guests absolutely soaked. The latter ride is more thrilling, but also more of a one-trick-pony, with a massive 98-foot drop for guests to plummet down, but not much else. The two water coasters compliment each other quite nicely at the park.  

Blue Fire Megacoaster
Image: Europa Park

Perhaps the most important prototype model to be born out of Europa Park came in 2009, alongside an all-new Iceland-themed area at the park. Blue Fire Megacoaster is Mack's first launched thrill coaster, featuring four inversions and one LSM launch that catapults guests from 0 to 62 miles per hour in 2.5 seconds. Blue Fire is known as a good-not-great ride, and its launch is far from wild or record-breaking—Mack isn't exactly known for their forceful launches—but the original ride got people talking...talking enough that Mack's take on the launch coaster quickly became one to rival Intamin's (see: Maverick at Cedar Point or the upcoming VelociCoaster at Universal's Islands of Adventure). Iterations of this model can be found in Icon at Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Helix at Liseberg, and Copperhead Strike at Carowinds. Even Slinky Dog Dash at Disney's Hollywood Studios is a more family-friends take on the model that Blue Fire incepted. 

Not every Mack Rides model has been successful at Europa Park. Take Arthur, a fully-powered inverted family coaster. Powered coasters are unique in the industry, as they do not rely upon gravity in the way common coasters do, thus allowing them to meander through their layouts without fears of valleying, or getting stuck in one location of the layout due to a loss of momentum. Arthur has a sister coaster in Dubai, but has gained little traction apart from that. Another oddball at the park is Eurosat, more commonly referred to as the CanCan Coaster. This coaster is located in the French section of the park, within the massive globe. This coaster deals in more quirk than thrills, but that may make it even more enticing to a first-timer.  

Arthur at Europa Park

Rides like these aren't failures on Mack's part. No, they're quite the opposite; these rides are signs of expansion for Mack Rides as a company. Best-case scenario for a new Mack model is that it makes it big time, like we've seen in their launch and spinning coasters. But worst-case? Worst-case is, Europa Park ends up with another ride that's wholly-original, beautifully-themed, and can only be found there. This is a manufacturer that is taking big swings and accepting the big misses, because they've got some big wins up their sleeve, too. 

In the name of innovation and growth, Franz Mack opened his mad scientist's laboratory in the hills of Rust, Germany. Because of that idea—because there are no park executives to please or intellectual properties to uphold—Mack has created a park that can be precisely what they want it to be, from the massive rides on the midway to the flowers beside the queue lines. Because of that idea, Europa Park is regarded as not only a bucket list park, but the best park in the world. 

 
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