Mississippi Springs

Mississippi Springs Amusement & Water Park, formerly known as Six Flags Mississippi Springs, is an amusement park and water park located in, about 30 min (27.5 mi) from. A single price admission includes all day use of the rides and attractions in both parks. Mississippi Springs was opened in 2000, was renamed to Six Flags Mississippi Springs in 2002, closed in 2007, and reopened in 2012. The park is owned by Mississippi Springs Partners L.P. and is operated by.

History
After the success of Blazing Bayou, TimeWarner (and later Premier Parks) became interested in expanding there.

Roller Coasters

 * Aviator (2002; a B&M Batman clone, formerly known as "Batman: The Ride" from 2002-2007)
 * Double Trouble (2017; a Premier Rides Dual Launched Coaster, formerly Batman & Robin: The Chiller at Six Flags Great Adventure, purchased second-hand from Beto Carrero World who planned to install it for the 2014 season but didn't go through with the plan)
 * Mississippi Giant (2000; a GCI wooden coaster, fully retracked by GCI in 2021 and got Millennium Flyers that same year, was the second-to-last GCI built with PTC trains and the last GCI built with newly built PTC trains)

Flat rides

 * Casino Wheel (2000; a Huss Magic ride, formerly known as "Magic Trick" from 2000-2001 and "The Joker's Wild Card" from 2002-2007)
 * Hot Seat (2002; an S&S Space Shot tower, formerly known as "Superman: Ultimate Escape" from 2002-2007)

Kiddie rides

 * Crazy Diver (2002; A Zamperla Crazy Bus ride, formerly known as "Daffy's Diver" from 2002-2007)
 * Mini Teacups (2002; A Zamperla Midi Tea Party ride, formerly known as "Bugs Bunny Carrot Cans" from 2002-2007)

Mississippi Crystal Falls

 * Tornado (2005; a ProSlide Tornado "Rattler" slide)
 * Triple Tubesters (2005; three ProSlide PipeLine slides)