Difference between revisions of "Niigata Joypolis"

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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 Joypolis created by the company nearly a year and a half after the opening of the original Yokohama location, it proved to perform poorly, and by April 1998 had its operations outsourced to foreign company Magic City Co. Ltd.{{ref|https://www.ampress.co.jp/backnumber/bn1998.06.01.htm}}
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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 Joypolis created by the company nearly a year and a half after the launch of the original Yokohama location, it proved to perform poorly, and by April 1998 had its operations outsourced to foreign company Magic City Co. Ltd.{{ref|https://www.ampress.co.jp/backnumber/bn1998.06.01.htm}}
  
Under its new ownership, the park was renamed to Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis, losing several of its original attractions and décor on the ground floor and gaining several new restaurants in their place, as well as a new electronic card payment system. It closed permanently in January 2001{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20010602084138/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/}}, with the site redeveloped to become an entertainment complex in the following years.
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Under its new ownership, the park was renamed Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis, losing several of its original attractions and décor on the ground floor.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991011230616/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/MCtop.html}} Several new restaurants and traditional theme park rides occupied their space, utilising a electronic card payment system.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991011204255/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/MCcharge.html}} It closed permanently in January 2001{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20010602084138/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/niigata/}}, with the site redeveloped to become a new entertainment complex in the following years.
  
 
==Major attractions==
 
==Major attractions==
 
{{multicol|
 
{{multicol|
*''IMAX Ride Film''
 
*''[[Alien Panic]]''
 
*''[[Crazy Travel]]''
 
*''[[Q-ZAR]]''
 
 
*''[[AS-1]]''
 
*''[[AS-1]]''
 
*''[[VR-1]]''
 
*''[[VR-1]]''
 
*''[[Ghost Hunters]]''
 
*''[[Ghost Hunters]]''
 
*''[[Mad Bazooka]]''
 
*''[[Mad Bazooka]]''
*''[[Grandish no Yakata]]''
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*''IMAX Ride Film''
*''[[Hijiri Sasuperio Jogakuin]]''
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*''Alien Panic''
*''[[Psychadern]]''
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*''Q-ZAR''
 
}}
 
}}
  
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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, House of Grandish
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Niigata Joypolis Psychadern.jpg|3D sound rooms developed by [[Human]]
 
Niigata Joypolis Shop1.jpg|SegaSonic & Tails gift shop
 
Niigata Joypolis Shop1.jpg|SegaSonic & Tails gift shop
 
Niigata Joypolis Shop2.jpg|
 
Niigata Joypolis Shop2.jpg|

Revision as of 16:03, 22 March 2021

Joypolis logo 1994.png
NiigataJoypolis Exterior.jpg
Niigata Joypolis
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 Joypolis created by the company nearly a year and a half after the launch of the original Yokohama location, it proved to perform poorly, and by April 1998 had its operations outsourced to foreign company Magic City Co. Ltd.[2]

Under its new ownership, the park was renamed Magic City @ Niigata Joypolis, losing several of its original attractions and décor on the ground floor.[3] Several new restaurants and traditional theme park rides occupied their space, utilising a electronic card payment system.[4] It closed permanently in January 2001[1], with the site redeveloped to become a new entertainment complex in the following years.

Major attractions

Gallery

Promotional material

References


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)