Roller Coaster Reviews - Hersheypark


Hersheypark's home page

Here are some of the coasters, and what we think of them, at Hersheypark.

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Sooperdooperlooper
With a name like that, one might expect three loops. But this early example of a looping coaster has just one, nearly circular, loop. After the initial drop and high-g loop, this Schwarzkopf coaster becomes a runaway mine train type of ride. There are lots of banked curves and spirals, with no railing, and a mine tunnel that's dark in the daytime and lit up at night.
Sooperdooperlooper

Trail Blazer Coaster
Trail Blazer Coaster
This is a very mild runaway mine-train coaster. In fact, it's a little too dull for us jaded adults. Although there is some nice scenery with good mine theming, a "realistic" Old West bank robbery, and mine tunnel trusses that provide a severe headchopper effect, this ride is really meant for the kids.

Comet
A wooden out-and-back by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company, this ride gives a great view. The first two drops go all the way down to what should be the ground. But this ride is build over a river, so the drops go down to the water's surface. The second half of the ride is full of bunny hops (about six or seven!). This is one of the few rides where we have significant difference of opinion. Jeanne thinks this ride is very good, but Jon feels it's rather uninspiring.

Great Bear - We first rode this new B&M inverted at the end of its first year of operation. It is reminiscent of our favorite inverted, Batman: The Ride. It is bigger and longer, but it doesn't quite have the bang of that original marvel. Great Bear lacks the nonstop intensity of Batman, but it does twist marvelously into the tight spaces in and around the Sooperdooperlooper. It floats and swoops through Comet Hollow and really gives you the sensation of flying, but it's so smooth that it can be relaxing.

Great Bear animation

Sidewinder
This is the standard Vekoma Boomerang. Fun as always, especially once you learn how to hold your head so it doesn't get banged around.

Wildcat zooms by
Wildcat
This wooden twister was the first coaster built by Great Coasters International, the same company that built Six Flags America's Roar. We'd already ridden Roar and were not impressed. But the Wildcat is fun. It manages to combine the high-speed zooming of banked turns with the feel-it-in-the-pit-of-your-stomach dips and swoops of a hilly wooden coaster. All of this while giving a smooth and comfortable ride. Wildcat is a wonderful twister, with lots of curves, lots of hills, lots of drops, and a fair amount of air-time. If GCI can build more rides like this one, there will be some great coasters to ride.

Lightning Racer
Another coaster built by GCI (the creators of Wildcat), Lightning Racer is actually made of two tracks with trains that alternately race and "duel" (head toward each other and appear almost to collide) each other. The racing aspect works well, and a well-marked finish line combines with flashing lights and announcements for the winner of each ride.

The two tracks, which are nearly identical, provide a typical GCI ride that has lots of curves and turns, but not much air time. The single-car, open-front "Millennium Flyer" trains are comfortable, beautiful, and easily flow over the twisty track.

Lightning Racer

The Wild Mouse
This typical wild mouse is a compact coaster that features single-car trains that carry up to four people around a quick series of drops, dips, hills, and sharp, unbanked curves. Like most modern Wild Mice, the first part of the ride consists of genuinely frightening hair-pin turns that make most riders fear falling over, and the second half has a few short drops that surprise with their brief moments of air time.

Picture of coaster train

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