Adrian F.
Yelp
When it works (and that's the key phrase), Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is Walt Disney's answer to thrill rides. Sure, he never lived to see it open in 1979, but this runaway mine train is very much in the spirit of Walt's vision: themed storytelling disguised as a roller coaster. It's the wildest ride in the wilderness -- literally.
Designed by Imagineer Tony Baxter, Big Thunder replaced the aging Mine Train Through Nature's Wonderland, which was more "look at animatronic coyotes" than "hold onto your hat." Disneyland wanted something faster, wilder, and more thrilling to compete with Six Flags. The result: a high-speed coaster through red rock canyons modeled after Utah's Bryce Canyon, with Disney detail packed into every corner -- from exploding dynamite to ghost towns frozen in time.
You board a rickety mine train that looks like it shouldn't pass inspection, and before you know it, you're tearing through caves, past howling coyotes, and up and down jagged canyons. The curves whip you around, the drops give you just enough stomach flip to make Grandma scream, and the finale with dynamite blasting is peak Disney storytelling. When it's running, it's one of the best thrill rides in the park. When it's down for "technical difficulties"? You're just standing there wishing you were on Space Mountain instead.
Proof that Disneyland can make even whiplash charming.
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad isn't the scariest or the tallest, but it's Disneyland's purest thrill ride -- story, speed, and nostalgia all jammed into a runaway train. When it's working, it's perfect. When it's down, it's heartbreak with a "Please come back later" sign.
It's not the fastest coaster in California, but it's the only one with goats, dynamite, and Disney magic.