Six Flags Winnipeg

 is an amusement park located in the in,  but under the extraterritorial jurisdiction of , ,. The park opened in 1984 as Kid City after being rebuilt and expanded from the former Funland Winnipeg park, and was purchased by Premier Parks in 1996, rebranding under it's current name of Six Flags Winnipeg for the 1998 season.

The park's mascot is Leon the Otter (voiced by Martin Berger since his 1985 commercial debut), and he is notable for having been retained as the park's mascot even after the Six Flags rebranding.

From 2004-2011, Leon the Otter was replaced by Mr. Six on the parking lot sign, but that didn't stop Leon from being the mascot of the park, and he even appeared in his usual animated form at the end of the Six Flags Winnipeg version of the original Mr. Six advertisement.

History
In 1984, six years after Swiss-Québécois entrepreneur Jean-Claude Botrel purchased the Funland Winnipeg theme park and the adjacent The Haunted Mansion of Manitoba, Botrel rethemed Funland Winnipeg and built several new rides and attractions, naming the new park Kid City, inspired by in the.

The new park was heavily advertised on TV stations throughout and  throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, and featured attractions based off The Raccoons and the long-running TV series Polka Dot Door. The Haunted Mansion of Manitoba remained as part of Kid City, and still is part of the current Six Flags Winnipeg park to this day.

In 1996, Seagrounds Financial Group sold Kid City to Premier Parks for US$1 million. In 1998, the park rebranded as Six Flags Winnipeg.

Areas

 * DC Universe
 * Gotham City
 * Highway of Thrills
 * Kidzopolis (formerly "Wiggles World" from 2008-2010)
 * Looney Tunes Seaport (formerly "Popeye's Seaport" from 1997-1998)
 * Main Street
 * The Raccoons' Evergreen Forest
 * Whistlestop Park (formerly "Thomas Land" from 2008-2010)

Roller coasters

 * Batman: The Ride (2017, a RMC wood-steel hybrid roller coaster; rebuilt from the former Flying Brigade roller coaster which stood from 1973-2015) [Gotham City]
 * Big Spin (2007, a Gerstlauer 420/4 Spinning Coaster, formerly known as "Tony Hawk's Big Spin" from 2007-2010, only version of Pandemonium to retain the Big Spin name, not to be confused with Big Spin Halfpipe) [Highway of Thrills]
 * Boomerang: Coast to Coaster (2000, a Vekoma Boomerang) [Highway of Thrills]
 * The Joker (2017, a USA Coaster Company Mega Wild Mouse Coaster) [Gotham City]
 * Magic Flyer (1984; A PTC wooden kiddie coaster, formerly known as "Thomas' Railway" [2008-2010] before reverting back to the ride's original name "Magic Flyer") [Whistlestop Park]

Flat rides

 * Big Spin Halfpipe (2008; A Zamperla Mega Disk'O ride, formerly known as "Tony Hawk's Big Spin Halfpipe" [2008-2010]) [Highway of Thrills]
 * Leon's Otter Twist (1986; A Traver Caterpillar ride themed to Leon the Otter) [The Racoon's Evergreen Forest]
 * Scrambler (2000; A Huss-TechEruo Scrambler ride) [Highway of Thrills]
 * Twirlybirds (1973; A Eyerly Aircraft Company Loop-O-Plane ride; was briefly closed temporarily in 2018 after an incident on another Loop-O-Plane at a state fair in the United States) [Main Street]
 * Wind Chaser (1984; A Zierer Wave swinger ride) [Highway of Thrills]

Kiddie rides

 * 40 Winks (1973; A Mangles kiddie Ferris Wheel ride, formerly known as "Wee Wee Wheel" [1973-1996]) [Looney Tunes Seaport]
 * Seaport Coastal Delivery (1984; A Chance Rides kiddie umbrella ride with jeeps, formerly known as "Bluto's Monster Trucks" [1997-1998] and "Junior Jeeps" [1973-1996]) [Looney Tunes Seaport]
 * Taz Twister (1984; A Zierer kiddie Wave Swinger ride, formerly known as "Swee Pea Swings" [1997-1998] and "Whirlygig" [1984-1996]) [Looney Tunes Seaport]

Other

 * Acme Fun Factory (2000; A family ball pit playground area) [Looney Tunes Seaport]
 * RBC Park at Six Flags Winnipeg (2015; a ballpark and the spring training home of the Montreal Expos of Major League Baseball) [Main Street]
 * The Haunted Mansion of Manitoba (1968; a haunted mansion attraction, open all season long) [Highway of Thrills]

Six Flags Hurricane Harbor Winnipeg
Opened in 2007. Located on land on the property that was originally planned to be an expansion of The Raccoons' Evergreen Forest (which did get a minor expansion in 2015).
 * Adventure River (2007; a 1,000-foot (300 m) long lazy river)
 * Aqua Splash (2007; a WhiteWater West water coaster)
 * Blackbeard's Vengeance (2013; a body slide that follows a clockwise turn and then exits at water-level close to the entrance of Hurricane Bay)
 * Big Kahuna (2007; four-slide intertube complex)
 * Dive Bomber (2007; a five story slide where the floor drops out from under you, originally called "Cliffhanger" and didn't have trapdoors)
 * Hurricane Bay (2007; a 500,000 gallon wave pool)
 * Hurricane Mountain (2007; a set of ProSlide Technology Inc. Pipeline slides)
 * Leon's Discovery Island (2007; a WhiteWater West water play structure with slides, fountains, and a tipping bucket)
 * Leon's Wild Flume (2007; a Mack Rides Log Flume)
 * Soaker Coaster (2002; a Setpoint USA Suspended Coaster with water buckets similar to Flying Super Saturator formerly at Carowinds, originally in the Highway of Thrills area)
 * Tornado (2007; a ProSlide Technology Inc. Tornado "Rattler" slide)

Roller coasters

 * Flying Brigade (1973-2015, a PTC wooden coaster that is made to not look that intense at first... until after the mid course break run) [Highway of Thrills]