A world record breaking day!
Two weeks ago a few friends and I ventured to the base of Mt
Fuji, to Fuji-Q Highlands. Fuji-Q Highlands is one of Japans most popular theme
parks and is best known for its recorded holding roller coasters and elaborate,
thrilling rides and attractions. Since its establishment, the park has strived
to be at the forefront of theme park entertainment, and it is constantly
opening new rides. Approximately every five years, the park aims to build a new
record breaking ride.
On the bus |
We knew we were in for a good day!!
Considering how popular the theme park is, it is very competitively
priced. We purchased a bus and ticket combination for 6 300 Yen (£40). We
jumped on a bus right outside Mishima station which took us right to the entrance
of the theme park ready for opening time (8:50am). There is a pay as you go system for the rides, but you have to pay an entrance fee (1500 Yen - £10) and the big four are all 1000 Yen (£6.50) each so the cost starts to mount up.
Alongside the world’s scariest ghost house, the park currently
has four major roller coasters (we did enjoy a few others, but they are not
worth blogging about to be honest!) with the majority of the rides designed to
give you a spectacular view of Mt Fuji. The
best view of Mt Fuji is at the top of Fujiyama, right before you drop 79 metres
at a 65 degree angle, followed by further big drops. It is the parks most
famous roller coaster and it is the centre piece attraction, and one of the
longest in the world so its keeps bringing the thrills. It continues to rank as
one of the best in the world. I think this picture shows how much we loved
it!!!!
Fujiyama |
The photos taken whilst you are on the ride can be printed
of for a mere 500 Yen (£3.50), which I think is a bargain when you think the Alton
Towers likes to charge ridiculous amounts.
Next we went on Eejanaika, a “4th dimension”
roller coaster. It has the most inversions of any roller coaster in the world
and the seats rotate within the car. You
have nowhere to rest your feet, and it throws your body around like a pendulum.
First you start off being pulled up backwards, then straight down at 90 degrees
into a vertical drop, then it’s reversed, then a flip, then a corkscrew, and
anything else you can think of before you quickly come to a halt.
After a quick ice-cream stop, we dashed over to Takabisha.
It is the newest ride in the park and is the world’s steepest roller coaster
with a 121 degree free fall drop! You
start of in the dark and alongside the terrifying “nose dive” you also have to
endure many major twists and turns. This one is definitely not for the faint
hearted, and was for me the best ride. By the end, my hands were shaking!
Eejanaika |
Takabisha |
It was time for lunch, and the park offers many restaurants
and fast food options all of which are actually competitively priced. We grabbed a Moss Burger (American chain
burger restaurant) meal deal which included a huge burger, fries and a drink for
1000 Yen (£6.50).
We took a break from the big for and our next stop after
lunch was the ghost house which has been recognised by World Guinness Book of
Records as the scariest haunted house. We joined the 2 hour queue to enter the
haunted house this was nothing compared to the 5 hour wait it can get to in the
summer. It is a notoriously long wait
because they only let a few people in at a time to ensure the place doesn't become overrun with people and therefore ruin the experience, especially the
surprises.
Queueing outside the haunted hospital |
It is a big, old hospital where those who enter have no
fixed route and can walk around freely. Before entering you are constantly
reminded not to attack or hit any of the actors that jump out at you. Now for
those who know how competitive and confident I am, this was very difficult.
Anyone who accidentally harms an actor is liable to pay their medical expenses.
Before embarking on your adventure through the hospital you
are shown a couple of rather creepy and gory video clips about the history of
the hospital. Each group is given a small touch and are allowed to enter the
hospital in intervals. Since I had the touch I became the point women, checking
the corners and various rooms filled with jars that had organs inside, rooms
with medical equipment etc. the place definitely had the look and feel of an
abandoned hospital. Dummy corpses were placed in random areas and air jets shot
out here and there. The actors are really good and had detailed make-up and were
often well hidden. Some actors had little instruments in their mouths that made
the strangest clicking noise. The best
was when one zombie actor crept up on Ali and breathed down his ear, none of us
heard him creeping up behind us!! They actors came up very close, but never
made physical contact.
Half way through the hospital you have to give back your
touch, naturally rooms appeared much darker. The rooms were incredibly were designed
and really made you feel on edge, at one point you have to open a door and walk
down a very narrow corridor with doors on either side. It makes you think back
to the clip you are shown in the movie at the start, where patients are in the
corridor and desperately trying to get out of their cells. Finally you enter a big room, with sacks
hanging from the wall with “bodies” inside. Suddenly two zombies/patients chase
after you and you run through a door bringing you back to the entrance where
everyone is queuing to enter. Naturally, everyone is laughing at you screaming!
Occasionally there were pink doors that said “retire”. These
were for anyone who felt they could no longer continue. Overall, great experience and worth a visit!
Finally we had one and a half hours until our bus left and
one last big ride to take on! The queue for the ride was one and a half hours
so obviously we risked it. Our bus was leaving at 5:10pm and at 5:03 we got on the
ride. Dodonpa is a world record holder for fastest acceleration.
Dodonpa |
In 1.8 seconds
you reach speeds of 172 km/h (106 miles per hour)! The suspense builds
as you listen to a countdown while waiting in the dark before shooting out screaming
at the top of your voice. Great ride, which resulted in losing my voice for a
couple of days!
At 5:07pm we got off the ride and ran through the park
perfectly making our bus on time! It was a great day, and I would highly
recommend a visit. Ride queues get extremely long in the summer, so take a risk
and go in the rainy season (hopefully on a day with no rain) when it’s a little
quieter.
Sorry for the lack of blogging recently, I have been
extremely busy and temperatures have risen to a crazy average of about 34-35
degrees so I tend to spend my time off trying to cool down! Last weekend I went
to Ito for a traditional tub race down the river, I am currently starting art
work for that and I will blog about it early next week!
Have a great weekend!
Marion
No comments:
Post a Comment