Cedar Fair (Fictional)

Headquartered in.

History
In 2004, they went into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, forcing them to cancel several plans, including buying out the Paramount Parks.

As part of the company's turnaround plan after emerging from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in 2007, Cedar Fair bought Libertyland in from it's interim ownership board and began redeveloping Libertyland into the company's newest theme park.

In 2019, Cedar Fair purchased La Feria de Chapultepec and Selva Mágica from Ventura Entertainment, safety was the number 1 focus of the rebrand for La Feria de Chapultepec, and Cedar Fair invested $1 million in repairing Quimera at La Feria to make it safer, including replacing the "frankensteined" train with a new Premier Rides train.

Following Disney's purchase of the Peanuts license, Disney allowed Cedar Fair to keep the Peanuts license in areas that Disney's parks didn't cover.

Licenses

 * Peanuts (1997-present [Ontario, Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania, California, Dubai, Mexico, Tennessee, South Carolina, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri], 1997-2020 [any other region])

Parks

 * Canada's Adventure (Markham, Ontario)
 * Cedar Fair Dubailand (Dubailand, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
 * Cedar Fair of Texas (Katy, Texas)
 * Cedar Point (Sandusky, Ohio)
 * Dallas' Adventure (Dallas, Texas)
 * Dorney Park &amp; Wildwater Kingdom (Allentown, Pennsylvania)
 * Knott's Berry Farm (Buena Park, California)
 * La Feria de Chapultepec (Mexico City, Mexico)
 * Libertyland (Memphis, Tennessee)
 * Magic Harbor (Myrtle Beach, South Carolina)
 * Michigan's Adventure (Muskegon, Michigan)
 * Selva Mágica (Guadalajara, Mexico)
 * Valleyfair (Shakopee, Minnesota)
 * Worlds of Fun (Kansas City, Missouri)

Trivia

 * They are one of the few chains with no "adult licensees" (e.g. DC Comics, Nintendo, Redwall [partial], etc.).
 * They went into bankruptcy in 2004-2007.