VALENCIA, Calif. — A Wonder Woman-themed roller coaster that will be the tallest and longest single-rail coaster globally will debut at Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia next year.


What You Need To Know

  • The brand new Wonder Woman Flight of Courage will be the tallest and longest single-rail roller coaster in the world

  • It will zip riders 58 miles per hour across 3,300 feet of track

  • The new ride will be located in the spot of the former Green Lantern: First Flight Ride, which closed in 2017 and removed in 2019

  • Before the coronavirus pandemic, Six Flags Magic Mountain attracted 3.5 million visitors

Six Flags announced Thursday that it plans to build Wonder Woman Flight of Courage, a roller coaster that will zip riders 58 miles per hour across 3,300 feet of track, including a 131-foot hill, an 87-degree drop, three inversions, raven dive, zero-gravity roll and more. The ride will include a Greek architecture-themed ride queue with tropical landscaping and detail Wonder Woman’s origin story.

“Not only is this a record-breaking single-rail coaster, it brings Six Flags Magic Mountain’s coaster count to an unprecedented 20, the most in the world,” said Six Flags Magic Mountain President Don McCoy in a news release.

The coaster, currently under construction, will be located in the spot of the former Green Lantern: First Flight ride. That coaster, which hoisted riders up in a ride vehicle and spun them around, closed in 2017 and was removed in 2019.

The Wonder Woman roller coaster will anchor a new look, six-acre DC Universe-themed area of Magic Mountain.

Magic Mountain officials said they plan to redesign and expand its current DC Universe land with a new restaurant, bar and retail stores that will carry exclusive DC-branded merchandise. The DC Universe area includes Batman: The Ride, The Flash Speed Force and Wonder Woman: Lasso of Truth.

According to the Themed Entertainment Association, Six Flags Magic Mountain attracted more than 3.5 million visitors the year before the coronavirus pandemic. Last year, due to mandatory pandemic-related closures, Magic Mountain brought in 686,000 visitors.