Villains Land Coming to Magic Kingdom at Disney World!

Walt Disney World has announced big expansion plans for Magic Kingdom, officially confirming Villains Land is being built! This post shares details, concept art, and everything we know about the plan–plus comprehensive commentary about why this is happening and whether we think these are potentially good or bad additions for the park. (Updated November 9, 2024.)
This news was announced during the “Horizons: Disney Experiences Showcase” or Parks Panel presentation during the 2024 D23 Expo at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. Disney Parks Chairman Josh D’Amaro offered a sneak peek at concept art for the future in addition and teased what was to come in a few years.
The all-new Villains Land located ‘Beyond Big Thunder’ was just one of several blockbuster announcements for Parks & Resorts at Horizons, during which D’Amaro revealed several ‘shovel to soil’ projects that will come online in the next 5 years, including over a half-dozen additions that will debut before the end of 2025. He and head Imagineer Bruce Vaughn followed through on their promise to deliver concrete details and not just tease more ‘Blue Sky’ possibilities.
Disney shared that Villains Land is a place where poison apples are aplenty and magic potions can ruin your whole day; where once upon a dream is actually once upon a nightmare. For all those things hiding in the shadows, it’s time to join them as we lift the veil on a forthcoming Villains Land at Magic Kingdom Park in Walt Disney World Resort.
This new land will be home to the Disney Villains we know and loathe from fan-favorite Walt Disney Animation Studios classic films. As Josh D’Amaro shared, it’s a place where “happily ever after may feel like just a distant dream.”
The evil ambition of all these Villains means that the possibilities are endless for the stories that can be told — and visitors to the dark and thorny land should be prepared for whatever chaos might come their way. The new land will encompass all your dreams- er, nightmares.
Villains Land at Magic Kingdom will be home to two major attractions, dining, and shopping on an incredibly twisted grand scale.

“Be prepared, you poor unfortunate souls,” Josh teased. “It’s going to be a fearless new vision for what a Disney experience can be.”
Before you get dismissive about Villains Land being a distant dream nightmare, it’s worth pointing out that Josh emphasized in his opening remarks to the Parks Panel at the 2024 D23 Expo, “Everything we’re going to share with you is in active development. Plans are drawn. Dirt is moving. I just want to be clear about this: We are doing everything you’re going to hear tonight. This isn’t Blue Sky—we’re going to do all of this.”
Josh brought this point full circle when concluding the presentation with Villains Land, sharing that preparation is already underway at Magic Kingdom for this new land. We’ve actually been expecting permits for a while on this expansion (albeit not knowing that Villains Land was one of the concepts that “won”). Here’s hoping that those permits are filed soon now that the cat’s out of the bag!
If you zoom in on the concept art, you can actually see a tremendous amount of detail. There are thorn-covered roller coaster tracks, a dark village, Maleficent the Dragon, and much more. It has obvious Sleeping Beauty vibes, but it also reminds me a lot of Epic Mickey!

November 10, 2024 Update: In a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, Parks Chairman Josh D’Amaro revealed that Villains Land will feature inspiration from 13 of the studio’s classic villains in a twisted storyline uniting the animated baddies in one place. Disney previously shared the villains roster for the new land during D23 Brazil (see below), but D’Amaro elaborated further on the premise of the land during this interview.
Disney pulled back the curtain on the conceit for Villains Land, which involves a magic power that conjures all of the Disney Villains to converge in one place. “In our story, a mysterious spell has been cast, summoning villains from every realm,” D’Amaro said. “In this land, heroes don’t come to save the day — and there may not be a happily ever after!”
It’s unclear whether this is the backstory for Villains Land, but honestly? I hope so. Imagineering sometimes has a tendency to over-explain things (see Tiana’s Bayou Adventure) or create cumbersome and rigid rules (see Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge) with backstory that’s tedious or restricting–sometimes both.
Personally, I’m perfectly fine with this being the totality of the backstory. There’s a magic power that summons villains via a spell that has been cast and its origins are a mystery. Don’t overthink it. This also opens the door for what I personally want to see, which is a dark ride that combines multiple villains from multiple movies. The Monsters Unchained headliner attraction at Epic Universe is a good template. Having the marquee attractions limited to only one intellectual property can be good, but not in a land revolving around villains. That would mean too many “snubs.”

Prior to this, during this weekend’s Disney Experiences presentation at D23 Brazil, D’Amaro shared on an update on the Villains Land coming to Magic Kingdom. The only real news was that he revealed an “inspiration board” featuring some of the villains that will inspire and be included in the new land.
The pictured villains included the following:
- Queen of Hearts
- Jafar
- Evil Queen
- Lady Tremaine
- Yzma
- Captain Hook
- Cruella de Vil
- Maleficent
- Gaston
- Mother Gothel
- Ursula
- Hades
- Chernabog
- Dragon Maleficent (aka “Murphy” IYKYK)

Perhaps what’s most interesting about this lineup is that the images were pulled directly from the Disney Lorcana Card Game. This has already caused fans to speculate on tie-ins between the trading card game and the upcoming land in Magic Kingdom.
In our view, this is entirely coincidental. Disney likely wanted a consistent and eye-catching art style for the villains. Lorcana and its stunning designs offers exactly that. This is far and away the most likely explanation, especially given that the Villains Land won’t open until 2029 or 2030 and will exist for decades to come. Who knows whether Lorcana will still even be popular when the land opens, let alone years from now?
What I could see happening is the artists behind Lorcana being recruited for future Villains Land concept art–they’ve done great work on the cards and deserve such an opportunity. So in a way, it is possible that Lorcana does inspire this land…but not the speculation among some fans goes far beyond that. It’s a huge leap to think this will be a Lorcana land. That’s doubly true since Disney has not even released the “inspiration board” art–it just flashed on screen at the event. Usually, when Disney shows art but doesn’t publish it, there’s a reason for that.

Speaking of other inspiration, Walt Disney World has also recently announced the new Villains Magic Mirror stage show, which is set to open in Summer 2025. This new entertainment offering will feature iconic Disney villains such as Cruella de Vil, Captain Hook, and Maleficent, and (as the name suggests), will be staged in the Magic Mirror’s mysterious realm, bringing guests closer to these notorious characters through immersive live production numbers.
I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if Walt Disney World wants to do more market research on the most popular villains with guests before making firm commitments for which characters will (and won’t) be represented in the Villains Land. Some are likely a given, but there are “borderline” villains that could make the cut or miss it based on guest reactions and surveying from this show.
The Villains Magic Mirror show also gives Walt Disney World to do a relatively low-stakes test to see how intense, dark or scary they can get with a villains offering outside of a hard ticket event. As we’ve mentioned before, Alien Encounter is an infamous example of an attraction that was too dark for Magic Kingdom and was prematurely shuttered despite being reasonably well-received by its target audience. Disney understandably does not want a repeat of that with Villains Land.

Turning to our commentary about the new land, Villains Land was–without a doubt–the announcement that got the biggest and most enthusiastic response out of the Honda Center audience. Despite it being Walt Disney World news and this being a Disneyland home crowd, fans absolutely erupted. Far and away the most loudest and most energetic reaction of the entire evening. Just as it was two years ago when Villains Land was teased during the Blue Sky session.
It’s my understanding that Disney was uncertain how Villains Land would be received, and wanted to gauge the response. Both with the in-person and at-home audiences. Obviously, it was and is overwhelming positive…among fans. This has been clear for a couple of years now.
Despite that, it also was my understanding–until tonight–that there were still internal apprehensions about moving forward with Villains Land. That it would be “too dark” or “not sufficiently mainstream” for Magic Kingdom. (Yes, the same park that just gave us a TRON ride. Ironic.)

This may seem absurd, but the thinking was that even though fans feel one way, they aren’t necessarily representative of the general public. There’s also the fact that Magic Kingdom has a reputation as being the park for families with kids of all ages.
Extreme as this might sound, Disney actually has cause for concern–Alien Encounter is an infamous example of an attraction that was too dark for Magic Kingdom and was prematurely shuttered despite being reasonably well-received by its target audience. It would’ve been perfectly fine for the park now known as Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
More recently, Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser is another niche project that may have given certain leaders cold feet about creating something that lacks widespread appeal. That is a terrible example for reasons that are probably obvious to anyone reading this.
To be clear, this is not my perspective at all. I was and am fully on board with Villains Land in Magic Kingdom. To the contrary, I’ve actually been concerned by Disney seemingly shying away from villains and conflict in certain attractions, and am both excited and relieved that Villains Land won out.

In my view, Villains Land fits the mold for a perfect Magic Kingdom themed land. Even though it’s become a franchise or brand, at its heart, this is a more open concept like the existing lands, rather than a single intellectual property, movie or character. As much as I enjoy Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, I still think it feels odd and disconnected from the rest of Disneyland. So I’m glad to see Villains Land as opposed to Encanto or Coco lands.
It’s inevitable that fans will compare this to Dark Universe at Universal’s Epic Universe, perhaps claiming that’s the reason why Walt Disney World is creating a Villains Land–as their “answer” to that. It isn’t, but the comparison is perfectly fine. A good thing, actually. Dark Universe looks incredible–like the early #1 area of Epic Universe.
That plus the fan excitement for Dark Universe plus the fan enthusiasm for Villains Land means the Imagineers are going to bring their a-game. More importantly, it means that instead of proceeding with apprehension, Walt Disney World will go all-in on Villains Land, giving it the budget and space needed to create something truly…well, magical feels like the wrong word.

Beyond that, it’s not really a huge surprise that expansion is happening in Magic Kingdom. Josh D’Amaro first got up on stage to talk about ‘Beyond Big Thunder’ at the last D23 Expo, when he was joined by Imagineer Chris Beatty and Jennifer Lee, the Chief Creative Officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios.
They didn’t provide any substantive details or even an official announcement, instead being careful to use language crouching the presentation, indicating that this is an “early concept exploration” and one of the “potential expansion opportunities” (but also more concrete than a blue sky brainstorming session).
Since then, both CEO Bob Iger and D’Amaro have done interviews or presentations and repeatedly doubled-down on their intentions to expand Walt Disney World. Both have indicated that Imagineers are already at work on improving the guest experience at Walt Disney World and adding capacity in several ways.

At last year’s Destination D23 event, Josh D’Amaro was joined on stage by Bruce Vaughn, who had recently returned to the helm at Walt Disney Imagineering. Vaughn first expressed surprise that D’Amaro would pull back the curtain on the creative process, as normally WDI doesn’t like to do that. Vaughn further indicated that he’s been blown away by the concepts being explored for Magic Kingdom.
The Beyond Big Thunder project scope and scale are supposedly on par with Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge or Pandora – World of Avatar. Last year, Vaughn also indicated that the project would likely exceed New Fantasyland over a decade ago.
During the 2024 D23 Expo, Josh D’Amaro indicated that Villains Land would be the biggest expansion in Magic Kingdom history. That means that, at minimum, this is larger than New Fantasyland–which is actually fairly sizable.

In the medium or long-term, expanding Magic Kingdom outside the berm makes a ton of sense. We’ve been bullish on the Magic Kingdom Expansion Possibilities “Beyond Big Thunder” since last D23 Expo, even as other fans expressed (completely understandable and valid) skepticism. That’s totally fair, especially in light of Disney’s not-so-stellar track record in building things that were announced at past D23 Expos.
However, we think this time is different. (Famous last words.) This is one of those rare occasions where the stars align and what’s good for investors is good for guests. Parks & Resorts has proven a financial powerhouse for the company–strong and stable even as other business units have faltered. Expanding Magic Kingdom improves capacity, gives the park more drawing power, and is just plain fun for fans. (All lessons learned back in 2009, proving yet again that history repeats itself!)

One of the more valid criticisms of the ‘Beyond Big Thunder’ plan is that it arguably is an expansion of the one park at Walt Disney World that’s least in need of it. Magic Kingdom is already a solid full day park, with a wide variety of rides, shows, entertainment, and more. There’s a reason it’s the best park for Lightning Lane availability–because it has the deepest attraction roster.
By contrast, there’s clear room for improvement at Animal Kingdom, Hollywood Studios, and EPCOT. While more is on the way for the first two parks on that list, EPCOT’s overhaul is now largely considered done. Regardless, all of those parks could have further expansions and still wouldn’t be on par with Magic Kingdom.
Realistically, that will always be the case. Magic Kingdom is the oldest park, so it has a headstart on the rest. More importantly, it’s the most iconic park. There’s nothing more “Disney” than a castle at the end of Main Street, and even as the international parks have deviated from the tried and true playbook, they all have that in common. There’s a reason for that.

No matter what Walt Disney World adds to the other three gates, Cinderella Castle will beckon guests from around the world. Because of that and its 50+ year legacy, it just makes sense to expand Magic Kingdom. The practical reality is that it’s the park that will always need more capacity, and that’s the easiest to “sell” from a marketing perspective.
Not only will Villains Land and the rest of the ‘Beyond Big Thunder’ project add that needed capacity, but it’ll improve crowd flow and further enhance the crown jewel of Walt Disney World. It’s easy to nitpick decisions from the fan perspective and wanting better balance among the existing gates. But at the same time, it makes a tremendous amount of sense to meet guests where they are, and build out the park that guests are most likely to visit.
(I have a hard time imagining that many fans will complain about this given that we’re getting a Villains Land out of this, but just felt it needed to be preemptively addressed for the old school EPCOT Center enthusiasts who feel spurned. Even as someone perpetually hoping for the next version of Journey into Imagination, I have zero complaints about this!)

Ultimately, I’m excited for the future of Magic Kingdom and how this new Villains Land located ‘Beyond Big Thunder’ comes to fruition. The concept art and the animating ideas show a tremendous amount of potential, and I’m really curious as to how the other adjacent lands–Frontierland and Liberty Square–also evolve to support this historic transformation. Speaking of other lands, I hope those aren’t forgotten in the process, as Tomorrowland could still use some help.
It shouldn’t be a problem to do both invest in new additions and enhance or maintain what’s already there. If all goes well, the decade to come at Walt Disney World could be bigger than the prior one. The current plan to invest $17 billion amounts to more than was spent on New Fantasyland, Pandora, Toy Story Land, Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, the EPCOT overhaul, new resorts, and a significant amount of infrastructure. (As previously discussed, a lot of money was wasted on things that didn’t come to fruition or were short lived.) If even more money is invested without the misallocations of resources, it could be a blockbuster decade for Walt Disney World. We can’t wait.
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YOUR THOUGHTS
What is your reaction to Villains Land being officially announced for Walt Disney World? Happy about this concept? Pleased with park expansion in the existing footprint of the park and beyond the berm at Magic Kingdom? Are you more excited for this plan knowing that work is already in progress at Magic Kingdom, or still in ‘wait and see’ mode? Do you agree or disagree with our assessments? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

I am so excited for Villains Land! I’m really hoping for character dining in the new land. Think of it, character dining with Maleficent, Cruella, and two others (so many possibilities)!
Would still rather have seen them start a 5th park with the Villains. It would be much better that whatever Flamingo Crossings is. MK capacity is 90,000 guests and with the Cars ride and Villains land it will probably increase another 15-20,000. That doesn’t sound very enjoyable, especially if you also have to pay extra money to go on the new rides with this new system.
Artwork looks great but someone needs to replace the sky with the sunny blue sky of FL where it won’t look nearly as scary.
Villains Land will be fine. Yes some kids will be scared. Way back we had friends that took their 3 & 6 yr old girls for a week. First ride they rode was the old Snow White’s Scary Adventure or whatever it was called. They didn’t ride another ride the rest of the entire week. Our kids, same age, loved EVERYTHING and we rode stuff over & over again.
This!
Hope they bring back the, apparent “too scary,” Snow White ride. That would be great.
For those concerned with children being scared of the Villains area – I would bet “It’s Tough To Be A Bug” is far scarier for children than anything will be here.
With Cars taking over the Rivers of America, it seems that Cars mini-land will serve as the gateway into Villains Land, and that Villains Land will likely be north/northwest of the WDW RR. To me, that looks like Floridian Way and past it is indeed going to be part of the new land.
Maybe people should mind their own darn business and let parents parent on their own terms. My 3 year old is 99% not scared of any Disney property we’ve shown her. I’m sure most kids will be fine with cartoonish villains. Disney isn’t making this into Halloween Horror Nights or anything, I promise.
Agreed. I loved Alien Encounter as a child, and as a Disney adult, am more excited to visit MNSSHP each year just to see the villains. This is superb news and one our entire family was hoping for! I think there’s going to be a lot of hype on how they design the land, but folks will be surprised how much it doesn’t affect most children.
Totally agree. We have a toddler who does get scared of the “scary parts” in Disney movies but I’m still excited for this. For one thing, not everything has to be perfect for my current four year old, and for another thing, she’ll get older! It’ll be great to have another thing older kids are excited about at the park.
I regret being a doubting Thomas, but I will believe it when I see it. Disney has lied, cheated, and stolen so much in the past.
This looks really nice. I’d be especially excited if they could figure out a way to add this while also not removing Tom Sawyer Island. But if the island does need to go, I’d understand why. Just like the old “Skyway”, it’s an older simpler design that lacks the distinctive complexity and excitement of modern Disney World attractions/lands.
For those who bemoan the possible loss of peaceful/chill escapes… they can always go back to their hotel room midday instead. Or just… forget the endurance requirements of a WDW vacay in favor of State or National Park. There are plenty of National Parks Service rangers who’d love to tell more guests about the actual history of their mountain/lake/fort/etc. There’s their “less crowded” escape, right? But that isn’t what most mouse ear wearing families really want. It seems like they want this, and like Tom, I’m glad it’s happening. Even if Disney needs to bulldoze some existing stuff in order to get this connected properly, I’d rather have Villains.
So, where do they put all this? Like many, I’ve been going to Google Maps and marveling at how out of date it is, with River Country’s ruins still present, no footpath from the Grand Floridian to the Magic Kingdom, Tron, Galaxy’s Edge, Galactic Star Cruiser, Cosmic Rewind, Ratatouille, the Riviera Resort, and the Skyliner all still under construction, the Lua Cove still there at the Poly, and many other present day anomalies.
But, yeah, where to put an entire land, plus 2 Cars rides? I’ve no answer to all of that, but there’s a large crescent shaped swath, bounded roughly by Caribbean Way and Center Drive at each end and Floridian Way, on the north/north-western side., of course, in that area, you have the Rivers of America, a canal and the Walt Disney World Railroad.
Teo things strike me: First, filling in the northern portion of the Rivers of America and losing the northern island for repurposing gains a LOT of space that’s already within the berm. Second is that if you go past the berm, the WDW RR is smack dab in the middle of anything you’d want to do. My thought is that we might be looking at a rerouting of the RR. Emphasis on “might” as there could be ways to accomplish what they plan without the need to move the track. That canal I mentioned could be rerouted north of Floridian Way for most of the distance, filling in to gain additional land.
It all depends upon how ambitious Disney wants to get, because I can see Floridian Way, at that point, not even being a consideration. This is due to Floridian Place, which branches off at Maple Road by the Reedy Creek Fire Station 3. and makes its way north eastward, to the parking lots around Disney University, intersecting with Center Drive, and ending at Reams Road. Google Street View does not provide a view of Floridian Way between Floridian Place and Center Drive, and I can’t recall if it ever did. I know we’ve driven on it in past years, making a circle around the Magic Kingdom on it, but if it’s no longer needed, that potentially opens up an area for development almost as large as the Magic Kingdom. I’m not saying that’s how big Villain’s Land is going to be. I’m just pointing out that there’s no need to limit where the borders of this are going to end up.
Right now, I think the only things we can take for granted is that there will be a transition area from one land to the next, as has traditionally been the case, such as the hub bridges leading into Adventureland, Tomorrowland, etc., or the tunnel between Grand Avenue and Galaxy’s Edge. It makes sense for it to have a connection back to Fantasyland, or Liberty Square. for crowd flow purposes.
In the end, we’ll just have to wait and see. As always.
I agree with Paul above. Tom and Sara you need to protect your little girl from this evil. I assure that Walt would not have allowed this. He liked a little terror and horror but this is going way too far.
they should have put a headless horseman ride in liberty square.. would have been perfect.
So, I understand that Toy Story 5 will have the toys banding together to save a child’s favorite play area, Fort Langhorn and the rest of the Rivers of America area from a sinister combo of greedy executives and hardcore WDW fanatics…, oh, wait…
There’s so much here to unpack. The concept art looks like the perfect thing to give nightmares to the single-digit-age crowd.
It sure doesn’t look like “The Happiest Place on Earth”, does it?
This could be great and still backfire, badly, on Disney. Why? PERCEPTION. The possibility of this being perceived the wrong way by a lot of families, as being too scary for their kids, or, worse, glorifying the villains. Because Disney classics have always been about defeating the bad guys, not glorifying the bad guys. Classic Disney villains are just that, villains, not morally relativistic characters.
I’m not saying that’s what Disney is doing here, but this is the company that made 2 movies in recent years about one of its most evil and greatest classic villains and made her the victim.
Don’t get me wrong. I LOVE a great villain. It’s one of the things that’s been missing from all too many Disney and Pixar movies in recent years. One of the best character meals we ever went to was at 1900 Park Fare featuring the Cinderella cast, and the absolute best things about it were Lady Tremaine and, especially, the wicked stepsisters, fully in character. Over-the-top villains can be fantastic, and Disney has some great ones to draw upon.
As an example, my son pointed out how Disney had missed a golden opportunity with the reimagined Tiana’s Bayou Adventure in not having the “Are You Ready?” chorus from “Friends on the Other Side” as you go up the ramp before the big drop. Speaking of great villains, the argument can be made that Keith David’s Dr. Facilier was Disney’s last truly great villain, with those since ranging from good to mediocre to nonexistent.
So, while this could be well done and backfire on Disney, this could also be great and be a resounding success. Disney should (IMHO) market this as the guests are the heroes, and the attractions are a means of conquering the villains. My 2 cents spent.
I can’t help but think, again, the synergy of it. This vibe would have no trouble at Hollywood Studios, but the Magic Kingdom? I mean this is a park which made pirates ransacking towns a fun adventure, and the Haunted Masion a humorous excursion. But those were all parts of lands, not a land in and of itself. They do show ways that villainy and scary stuff can be handled, and that the Magic Kingdom does have that background, but this is on an entirely different level.
Disney should keep Fantasia in mind: After the terror of “Night on Bald Mountain” comes the “Ave Maria”. If they go with that type of theming, with good ultimately winning, then this could be fantastic, both in execution and with the average family out there. Perception can become reality, and Disney needs to thread this needle carefully with the masses.
Not to nitpick but WDW is the most Magical place on earth, not the Happiest. That’s DL
Thanks, Sara, I stand corrected.
I really hope they put more than just 2 attractions in the new “land”. And hopefully they can build it Admiral Joe Fowler style and not take half a decade or longer to get it done.
Hi Tom:
Great coverage, as usual. As a longtime WDW visitor, I appreciate the “greenspace” (breathing room)
that the river and islands provide. It’s what makes the western side of the park more atmospheric and less crowded feeling. So I hope North Island (original name in 1971) gets trimmed only as needed. And
Disneyland created it’s own “drydock” to service the Mark Twain right on the riverbank ( so that canal could be filled in for access to the main real estate. ) Also in the minority on the Cars expansion. The format
they’ve chosen creates additional spires and buttes behind big thunder and could blend in seamlessly
(no need to reveal the actual rides until you’re “there.”) Also, in the Villain artwork, do I detect a cloaked figure to the right of Maleficent’s Castle carved into the mountainside? Any guesses who? Snow White’s Witch? The Horned King? Am I seeing things?
I hope there is a Villains show also or parade. What a great background that would be. Can’t wait!
Woohoo!! I’m so thrilled that a villians’ land has been officially announced. That concept art looks amazing. After all the Blue Sky teases, it’s really exciting (and encouraging) to see a concrete announcement for this daring (and awesome) project. When they go all in, Disney can still create well-detailed, fantastic environments (Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, Pandora, Toy Story Land)…so this one could be incredible. However, despite their (always accompanying) hype, some of their recently-delivered projects have been over-priced, poorly-designed disappointments (looking at you Communicore hall). So, I guess after my initial celebration, I think I need to temper my excitement a bit and lean towards cautiously optimistic.
Hello Tom
I didn’t see any timeline – was anything mentioned ?
Moreover I am a bit confused ; beyond BTM there’re the railroad ; where would they have their new land ? I could see place beyond fantasyland but not so beyond BTM unless they touch the island ?? It would be a shame
Similar to Galaxy’s Edge in Disneyland, which was built behind the Rivers of America, the river will almost certainly be shortened, and the island shrunk.
To be fair, most of Epic Universe looks great but it was Dark Universe that made me sit up and say we’re going to Universal for the first time in decades. All those wonderful early movie monsters in a land where you can go to a restaurant and be served by vampires was just so cool.
Disney has some of the best villains ever created. Villains Land has an embarrassment of riches to draw upon. It also is a land that will never go out of style like one based on a single movie could because it incorporates all movies past, present and future.
This is great!
Absolutely TREMENDOUS NEWS….. BUT, I stand by my conviction that the nighttime parade is the best news of the day which will turn around WDW’s fortunes quickly.
For the record I loved Alien Encounter.
In my opinion, these two announcements alone make this the best D23 ever.
Hope they design it with current & future heat and humidity in mind…shade, misters, waterfalls etc.
I couldn’t be more excited with this news! This was what I’d been praying for! I sincerely hope they go all in (similar to the Halloween parties or Oogie Boogie Bash). They could easily do a Nightmare Before Christmas dark ride. plus so many other villains to love! I think if they embrace a bit of the dark side they will really compete with Universal that embraces it & takes it too far. Dark stuff can be a lot of fun. It doesn’t have to go as far as horror. It can easily stay in the same realm as Haunted Mansion & be great. So that’s what I’m hoping for. A little good humored, slightly scarey stuff. Even general fans have no problem with villains in the stories so why would they suddenly have an issue.