Epic Universe: Islands of Adventure 2.0?

TL:DNR – Gushing posts about how epic many things in Universal Epic Universe are will be coming. But there are already some maintenance issues that are a bummer to see.


After spending two days visiting Universal Epic Universe within four months of the public opening in May 2025, I find myself comparing it to when I visited Islands of Adventure in November 1999, just six months after that parked opened in May 1999.

I will have about 2500 photos from the new park to add to my Universal/SeaWorld photo gallery in the next week or so. I will also be adding photos from the new Stella Nova hotel, as well as new photos from Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, and SeaWorld’s Discovery Cove.

It is clear to me that this park sets new standards in theming and experience. Whereas Disney will occasionally throw in a single high end animatronic (the wicked witch from Great Movie Ride or the one in the Pandora Avatar ride, for example), Universal seems to have only put high end animatronics in their two dark rides – Monsters Unleashed and Harry Potter and the Battle at the Ministry. These two rides contain some of, if not the, best animatronics I have ever seen. It seems unlikely Modern Disney(tm) would ever spend that much money in one of their attractions — at least not here in the U.S.A.

Yet, for a park that only opened to the public four months ago, there are already things broken that really shouldn’t be. For example, stairs leading down to the fountain viewing area are roped off due to many cracks…

I fear that “today’s construction” is sub-bar compared to how things were built in the past.

The new “carousel” (calling the Constellation Carousel a “carousel” is doing a disservice to that ride — it is far, far beyond what any of us likely think of when we hear the term “carousel”) already has paint in very bad shape:

There are just two examples, but there were other spots in pavement that had been roped off with similar cracking issues, and areas where the “shiny and new” paint jobs looked like they needed to be redone.

“All of this has happened before, and it will all happen again.”

When I visited Islands of Adventure for the first time in 1999, I waited six months after public opening to give the park some time to settle in and get things working. Even then, almost nothing in the park was working the first hour or so on the day of that visit. A few hours in, we managed to ride basically everything in the park that we wanted to. The crowds that November were low and lines were short. Islands of Adventure did not end up being the “Disney killer” many had hoped it would be, in spite of amazing theming in some areas. I still miss the Enchanted Oak Restaurant.

But, during that first visit, we noticed shortcuts. On a “castle” column, there were windows. The outside of the windows was nicely painted, but the edges remained unpainted wood.

At the fancy Enhanced Oak, they had nice menu boards, but no lighting installed yet. Instead, they used some clamp-on lights like you might buy at Home Depot. This clashed with the extremely nice theming of the rest of the establishment.

Pavement that should have been shiny and new had already begun cracking (and not in the intentional way they crack it in places like Lost Continent; it was cracking in places like Toon Lagoon).

There was already mildew (? or something ?) collecting along one of the water rides.

I *think* this may have still been during the years when Disney would brag about changing light bulbs before they were expected to burn out, and would sell you multi-day tickets where unused days would “never expire.”

It was a different time.

But still Epic…

But even with some “the construction company should be fired” issues, the park is indeed Epic. While eleven rides and two shows may not feel like a very big park, when you compare it to the “half-day” parks Disney has opened in the past, it is quite ambitious.

We can’t wait to return. But in the meantime, I’ll get some photos posted, as well as some VR360 video clips, and then break down some things we found most epic about the visit.

But give me a week or so to get caught up from this visit, and get all the photos sorted and videos converted.

Until then…