Six Flags Kings Funworld

Six Flags Kings Funworld (formerly known as Kings Funworld and Paramount's Kings Funworld) is an amusement park located at the intersection of the I-75 and FL-82 highways in Fort Myers, Florida. Owned and operated by Six Flags, the park was first opened in 1980 by the Taft Broadcasting Company.

History
The park opened in 1980 as Kings Funworld.

In 1992, Paramount Parks bought the Taft/KECO parks and renamed the park "Paramount's Kings Funworld".

In 2006, Six Flags bought out Paramount Parks and renamed the park to "Six Flags Kings Funworld".

Areas

 * DC Comics Adventure Zone (formerly known as "Action Zone" [1993-2006])
 * Camp Looney Tunes (formerly known as "The Wonderful World of Hanna-Barbera" [1980-2002] and "Nickelodeon Universe" [2003-2006])
 * Crack Axle Canyon
 * Six Flags Street (formerly known as "Main Street" [1980-2006])

Roller coasters

 * Batman: The Ride (2000; A B&M inverted coaster, custom layout, formerly known as "Top Gun: The Jet Coaster" [2000-2006]) (DC Comics Adventure Zone)
 * Boomerang (1998; A Vekoma Boomerang coaster, formerly known as "FACE/OFF" [1998-2006])
 * Canyon Blaster (1980; An Arrow Dynamics 100-ft tall mine train roller coaster, formerly known as "Mine Train" [1980-1991] and "Adventure Express" [1992-2006], retracked by Chance Morgan in 2012) (Crack Axle Canyon)
 * Déjà Vu (2007; A Vekoma Giant Inverted Boomerang coaster, formerly operated at Memphisworld)
 * Florida Panther (1980; A PTC wooden coaster) (Six Flags Street)
 * Goliath (2000; An RCCA wooden hyper coaster, at 210 ft tall it is currently the world's tallest wooden coaster, formerly known as "Son of Panther" [2000-2006], got rehauled by Intamin in 2007 with a near-full retrack, a new cable lift, and new Intamin trains, the original Premier trains are still sitting in storage) (Six Flags Street)
 * Hurricane (1992; A Vekoma Hurricane coaster, formerly known as "Anaconda" [1992-2006], repainted in 2007, ran backwards for the 2012 season, given vest restraint trains in 2017)
 * Roadrunner Express (1980; A Zierer Small Tivoli coaster, formerly known as "Top Cat's Taxi Jam" [1980-2002] and "Little Bill's Giggle Coaster" [2003-2006]) (Camp Looney Tunes)
 * Superman: Ultimate Flight (2004; A B&M "Superman" model flying coaster, formerly known as "BORG Assimilator" [2004-2006]) (DC Comics Adventure Zone)

Flat Rides

 * The Joker's Wild Card (2001; A Zamperla Hawk 24 ride, formerly known as "Tomb Raider: The Ride" [2001-2006]) (DC Comics Adventure Zone)
 * Kryptonite (1980; A Schwarzkopf Enterprise, formerly known as "Apple Turnover" [1980-1994] and "USS Enterprise" [1995-2006]) (DC Comics Adventure Zone)
 * Sidewinder (1980; A Huss Troika ride, given LED lights in 2003) (Six Flags Street)
 * Whirling Dervish (1980; A Zierer Wave Swinger ride, paintings restored in 2006) (Six Flags Street)

Kiddie rides

 * Bugs Bunny Sky Copters (1980; A tracked ride built by Arrow Dynamics where kids pedaled helicopter cars on a guided track, formerly known as "Scooby-Doo Sky Copters" [1980-2002] and "Fairly Odd-Copters" [2003-2006]) (Camp Looney Tunes)
 * Sylvester's Pounce and Bounce (2003; A Zamperla Jumpin' Star, formerly known as "Plankton's Plunge" [2003-2006]) (Camp Looney Tunes)
 * Taz's Road Rally (1980; A small guided-track car ride, formerly known as "Wacky Racers" [1980-2002] and "Nicktoons Racetrack" [2003-2006]) (Camp Looney Tunes)
 * Yosemite Sam's Truck Rage (1991; a Zamperla Convoy ride, formerly "Top Cat Trucks" [1991-2002] and "Reptar's Monster Trucks" [2003-2006])

Trivia

 * Goliath was initially planned to have a vertical loop in it's layout, just like Son of Beast, but due to maintenance and financial concerns it was later canceled.
 * Goliath's Intamin trains were actually reused from Bandit at Movie Park Germany, after Six Flags bought them and kept them in storage at some of their parks from 2001 to 2006.
 * They were initially planned to replace the PTC trains on Rattler at Six Flags Fiesta Texas, but for unknown reasons this plan fell through, and they remained in storage at the park near the coaster until 2003, when they were relocated to Six Flags Over Memphis (now Memphisworld) and planned to replace the PTC trains on Memphis Thunderbolt. Again, this idea fell through, and they remained in storage near the coaster until 2006 when Six Flags sold the park to Carwardine)