Difference between revisions of "Niigata Joypolis"
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{{VenueBob | {{VenueBob | ||
| logos= | | logos= | ||
− | | venueimage=NiigataJoypolis | + | | venueimage=NiigataJoypolis Exterior.jpg |
| imgwidth=320 | | imgwidth=320 | ||
| venueimage2= | | venueimage2= | ||
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| name= | | name= | ||
| location=新潟県新潟市八千代2丁目5番7号 新潟交通万代シティ, Japan | | location=新潟県新潟市八千代2丁目5番7号 新潟交通万代シティ, Japan | ||
− | | opened=1995-12-09{{ref|http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/ | + | | opened=1995-12-09{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20010602084138/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/}} |
− | | closed= | + | | closed=2001-01-16{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20010602084138/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/}} |
}} | }} | ||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} | ||
− | '''Niigata Joypolis''' (新潟ジョイポリス) was a [[Joypolis]] amusement theme park opened by Sega. The second of the Joypolis venues to be opened by Sega | + | '''Niigata Joypolis''' (新潟ジョイポリス), later '''Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis''' (マジックシティ@新潟ジョイポリス) was a [[Joypolis]] amusement theme park opened by Sega. The second of the Joypolis venues to be opened by Sega, it proved to perform poorly, and by April 1998 had its operations outsourced to foreign company Magic City Co. Ltd. as part of a restructuring. |
− | Under | + | Under its new ownership, the park was renamed to Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis, losing several of its original attractions and its original décor on the ground floor, and gaining several new restaurants as well as an electronic card payment system in the process. It closed permanently in January 2001, later becoming a shopping complex. |
==Major attractions== | ==Major attractions== | ||
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Niigata Joypolis GhostHunters.jpg|Ghost Hunters | Niigata Joypolis GhostHunters.jpg|Ghost Hunters | ||
Niigata Joypolis MadBazooka.jpg|Mad Bazooka | Niigata Joypolis MadBazooka.jpg|Mad Bazooka | ||
− | Niigata Joypolis Psychadern.jpg|Psychadern | + | Niigata Joypolis Psychadern.jpg|Psychadern, House of Grandish |
− | Niigata Joypolis Shop1.jpg| | + | Niigata Joypolis Shop1.jpg|SegaSonic & Tails gift shop |
− | Niigata Joypolis Shop2.jpg| | + | Niigata Joypolis Shop2.jpg| |
+ | NiigataJoypolis Outside.jpg|Magic City era exterior | ||
Niigata MagicCity Joypolis Inside.jpg|Magic City era interior | Niigata MagicCity Joypolis Inside.jpg|Magic City era interior | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> |
Revision as of 15:33, 14 March 2021
Niigata Joypolis |
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Location: 新潟県新潟市八千代2丁目5番7号 新潟交通万代シティ, Japan |
Opened: 1995-12-09[1] |
Closed: 2001-01-16[1] |
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Niigata Joypolis (新潟ジョイポリス), later Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis (マジックシティ@新潟ジョイポリス) was a Joypolis amusement theme park opened by Sega. The second of the Joypolis venues to be opened by Sega, it proved to perform poorly, and by April 1998 had its operations outsourced to foreign company Magic City Co. Ltd. as part of a restructuring.
Under its new ownership, the park was renamed to Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis, losing several of its original attractions and its original décor on the ground floor, and gaining several new restaurants as well as an electronic card payment system in the process. It closed permanently in January 2001, later becoming a shopping complex.
Major attractions
- IMAX Ride Film
- Alien Panic
- Crazy Travel
- Q-ZAR
- AS-1
- VR-1
- Ghost Hunters
- Mad Bazooka
- Grandish no Yakata
- Hijiri Sasuperio Jogakuin
- Psychadern
Gallery
Promotional material
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/ (Wayback Machine: 2001-06-02 08:41)
Joypolis venues |
---|
Current |
Tokyo Joypolis (1996) | Shanghai Joypolis (2014) | Qingdao Joypolis (2015) |
Former |
Shinjuku Joypolis (1996-2000) | Niigata Joypolis (1995-2001) | Yokohama Joypolis (1994-2001) | Fukuoka Joypolis (1996-2001) | Kyoto Joypolis (1997-2002) | Umeda Joypolis (1998-2018) | Okayama Joypolis (1998-2018) | Joypolis VR Shibuya (2018-2020) |