Difference between revisions of "Fukuoka Joypolis"
From Sega Retro
m |
|||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
'''Fukuoka Joypolis''' (福岡ジョイポリス) was an [[Joypolis]] indoor theme park opened in 1996. | '''Fukuoka Joypolis''' (福岡ジョイポリス) was an [[Joypolis]] indoor theme park opened in 1996. | ||
− | Little is known about the Fukuoka branch, aside from closing in 2001. Following closure, the venue was split up and sold off - part of it became | + | Little is known about the Fukuoka branch, aside from closing in 2001. Following closure, the venue was split up and sold off - part of it became a Ramen Stadium restaurant, while another section became [[Club Sega Canal City]], which subsequently closed in May 2009 and became a Taito Station. |
==Major attractions== | ==Major attractions== |
Revision as of 10:58, 1 March 2021
Fukuoka Joypolis |
---|
Location: Fukuoka, Japan |
Opened: 1996-04-20 |
Closed: 2001-09-24 |
This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Fukuoka Joypolis (福岡ジョイポリス) was an Joypolis indoor theme park opened in 1996.
Little is known about the Fukuoka branch, aside from closing in 2001. Following closure, the venue was split up and sold off - part of it became a Ramen Stadium restaurant, while another section became Club Sega Canal City, which subsequently closed in May 2009 and became a Taito Station.
Major attractions
- VR-1
- Q-Tag
- Aqua Nova
- Ghost Hunters 2
- Crazy Travel
- AS-1
- Grandish no Yakata
- Psychaban
- Hijiri Sasuperio Jogakuin
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) |