Six Flags Kings Island

Six Flags Kings Island is a 364-acre (147 ha) amusement park located 24 miles (39 km) northeast of Cincinnati in Mason, Ohio.

Changes from Paramount to Six Flags

 * June 30, 2006 - Six Flags bought out the park and added a temporary sign at the entrance building
 * July 1, 2006 - Six Flags adds a permanent entrance sign next to the fountains
 * July 3, 2006 - All Paramount music changed
 * July 30, 2006 - Permanent entrance building sign added and six pennant flags have been added around the fountains in front of the Eiffel Tower
 * August 13, 2006 - A Bugs Bunny meet & greet pop-up added
 * April 14, 2007 - All Paramount names removed from the park

Areas

 * Coney Mall
 * DC Action Zone
 * Rivertown
 * Sailor Schuyler's Seaport

Show venues

 * Festhaus - A live show venue located in Oktoberfest
 * Showplace Theatre - A live show venue located in International Street
 * S.F. Bandstand - An entertainment venue located between the Eiffel Tower and Royal Fountain located inInternational Street
 * Six Flags Theater - A 1,300-seat indoor theater first opened in 1976 and designed by Paul Shortt, the original founding faculty member at Cincinnati’s College Conservatory of Music. Formerly known as: American Heritage Music Hall (1976–1992); Paramount Theater (1993-2006). Located in International Street.
 * Timberwolf Amphitheatre - An outdoor amphitheater concert venue located in Oktoberfest

Hurricane Harbor
Hurricane Harbor opened in 1989 as WaterWorks, 17 years after Kings Island opened. In 1997, Kings Island expanded the water park in 1997 by adding the wave pool (Surfside Bay; now known as Bonzai Bay), and a new children's water playground. The following year, the FlowRider, and Pipeline Paradise opened as Wipeout Beach. Six years later, WaterWorks was renamed to Crocodile Dundee's Boomerang Bay Waterpark. In 2007, the park was renamed to Hurricane Harbor, with new slides.

Areas:
 * Low Tide (original 1989 land)
 * Mid Tide (1997 land)
 * High Tide (2005 land)