Spyke
lemmy.world

I want to visit the PNW someday and go to Silverwood to finally ride a giant inverted boomerang. The national parks in Washington will keep me busy out there too.

5
lemm.ee

I finally made it to SFNE last year but it was unfortunately too late to ride theirs.

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stooth64reply
lemmy.world

I still gotta get out there at some point too. Too many coasters everywhere 😅

Aftershock is especially interesting to me because it’s the one that was relocated from my home park, Six Flags Great America. I was never tall enough to ride it while it operated there (or maybe it was plagued with maintenance problems by the time I was).

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I honestly considered a career change to be a long haul truck driver just so I could end up in places closer to roller coasters that I want to ride 😉

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lemmy.sdf.org

It really just seems to be demographics, doesn’t it? Fewer families with young children, and a culture that emphasizes authenticity over cultivated themed experiences.

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It's funny how enthusiast groups always say poor PNW but fail to realize how culture is sometimes different. That's not to say there aren't a lot of people there that would love a big park with a dozen coasters but it's all relative.

One of the biggest problems the area faces is an in-between park probably couldn't survive. They either need to be small to function or they need to be a massive destination park to draw people in. Just take KD for example..... The park has it's locals but it also sits on I-95 which can bring people from distances because they have something worth traveling for -- and you unfortunately can't build a KD sized park, let alone a Disney or Universal overnight.

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Not just demographics. Demographics are part of it. So is weather.

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I hate it. I live in Seattle and I have to fly across the country to ride any notable coasters.

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Why Doesn't Seattle Have More Theme Parks? | Spyke