Galacticoaster is my new favorite ride at Legoland California — Here’s why
The new Galacticoaster is the ride I’ve always wished Legoland California would build that appeals to all four quadrants of a young family — the smallest toddler eager for adventure, the tween ready for a big kids ride, the cautious stroller-pushing mom and even the thrill-seeking dad.
The Galacticoaster indoor roller coaster debuts Friday, March 6 as part of the new Lego Galaxy themed land at the Carlsbad theme park. I rode the Galacticoaster five times during a media preview of the new outer space-themed land hosted by Legoland California on Thursday, March 5.
ALSO SEE: Legoland California lets you build your own coaster with 625 possible combinations
Galacticoaster has a lot of zip and pep for a Legoland attraction and benefits from repeat rides that let you discover more of the Lego asteroid belt and hear more of the on-board narration. There’s even a fart joke thrown in for good measure.
The Merlin Magicmakers packed a lot of backstory into the preshow and the relatively short coaster ride that takes aspiring young astronauts on a mission to save the galaxy from a giant Lego asteroid threatening to destroy Legoland California.
Delivering all that storytelling is really hard to do on a spinning roller coaster that reaches a top speed of 40 mph over a 1,500-foot-long track.
The 10-minute experience starts in a Mission Briefing Room where Lego astronaut Biff Dipper lays out the adventure. Riders are drafted as space cadets who must destroy an asteroid heading for Lego Galaxy.
Biff lays out the last-ditch Plan C after Plan A (shoot the asteroid with a laser) and Plan B (catch the asteroid with a big net) failed to stop the Lego asteroid. Riders must find the elusive Lego brick separator — used to take apart Lego bricks — and use it to break up the Lego asteroid.
Riders are divided into groups of four as they head into the Customization Bay where they design their own coaster cars using virtual Lego bricks at 10 individual digital screen terminals.
Each team of four must work together to choose a nose, tail, wings and special feature for their coaster car — with five choices in each category.
Riders see themselves sitting in their customized digital spaceship just before the twin coaster cars are dispatched into the heart of the ride.
The coaster cars don’t start spinning until midway through the journey when the riders find the elusive Lego brick separator and save the Lego Galaxy.
Galacticoaster is my new favorite ride at Legoland California in part because of its 36-inch height requirement, which lets older 2-year-olds and younger 3-year-olds get on the ride.
That’s a much shorter height requirement than my other two favorite rides at Legoland California — the Technic Coaster (42 inches) and Lego Ninjago The Ride (48 inches).
I can only think of one Legoland California ride that packed more thrills than the Galacticoaster since the kids-centric theme park opened in 1999.
Knight’s Tournament was the first installation of a Kuka RoboCoaster in the United States that operated at Legoland California from 2005 to 2019.
Knight’s Tournament put riders on a motion simulator robot arm and shook them like a giant paint mixer. It was a truly crazy ride that left many riders dizzy and didn’t belong at any Legoland park.
Disneyland is building a similar attraction using Kuka RoboCoaster arms with the Stark Flight Lab attraction coming to the Avengers Campus.
My biggest knock against Legoland California has always been that there is never enough for parents to do with their kids at the park. The park is built for 2 to 12 year olds, all too often at the exclusion of adults. The fun of a theme park is experiencing rides together as a family.
Galacticoaster fulfills that promise of a true family ride that everyone can enjoy together.
The first-of-its-kind indoor coaster built by ridemaker ART Engineering of Germany hits all of Legoland’s 2- to 12-year-old demographic while also packing enough punch to keep the parents entertained.
The indoor coaster ride through the dark is the centerpiece of the new Lego Galaxy themed land at Legoland California that includes the G-Force Test Facility spinning thrill ride and the Duplo Launch and Land helicopter ride.
An identical Galacticoaster without the themed land debuted in late February at Legoland Florida.
The $90 million project installing twin coasters at Legoland California and Legoland Florida marks the largest Legoland investment in the history of parent company Merlin Entertainments.