When TIME Magazine released its World’s Greatest Places list for 2026, Universal Epic Universe in Orlando claimed a spot that most theme parks spend decades chasing. The recognition arrived less than a year after the 110-acre park opened in May 2025, making it one of the fastest additions to the list in the publication’s history of running it.
The park is also the first new theme park to open in Orlando in 25 years. Located five miles from Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, and Volcano Bay, it was never designed to extend what already existed down the road. The intent was a different conversation entirely, and TIME noticed.
What put Epic Universe on the map
TIME journalist Terry Ward identified the park’s portal design as the feature that separates it from anything else currently operating in the industry. Guests do not walk from one themed section to another the way they would at a traditional park. They pass through distinct physical portals that signal a full shift in environment, sound, and story. Each of the five worlds operates independently of the others, a design commitment that no competitor has executed at this scale.
The five worlds cover significant creative ground. Super Nintendo World brings guests through a warp pipe into the Mushroom Kingdom, anchored by two rides. Mine-Cart Madness runs through Donkey Kong Country, and Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge layers augmented-reality racing over a coin-collecting experience. Both rank among the most visited attractions in the park.
The Wizarding World of Harry Potter — Ministry of Magic reconstructs 1920s Paris with enough detail to slow guests down before they ever reach a ride. Harry Potter and the Battle at the Ministry uses talking portraits and animatronics throughout the queue to hold attention from the moment guests enter the line. How to Train Your Dragon — Isle of Berk, Dark Universe, and Celestial Park round out the five worlds, mixing dragon storytelling with gothic monster attractions that give the park a tonal range most competitors avoid attempting.
Epic Universe’s signature thrill
Celestial Park’s Stardust Racers is the ride that has drawn the most attention from the enthusiast community. The dual-launch racing coaster reaches 62 mph, climbs 133 feet, and runs 5,000 feet of track on each of its two sides. Riders choose between the Photon and Pulsar tracks for what amounts to a competitive racing experience with matching airtime moments. Comparisons to coasters that have held top global rankings for years have circulated widely since opening day.
All 11 attractions launched simultaneously in May 2025. That kind of full-slate opening is essentially unprecedented in the industry and gave guests more original content in a single visit than most parks introduce across an entire decade.
How Epic Universe keeps guests on property
Three hotels opened alongside the park in 2025. Universal Helios Grand Hotel anchors the premium tier, offering a dedicated park entrance and early admission access that cuts wait times in a meaningful way. The integrated resort model is designed to keep visitors on property across multiple days, and it has worked. The park’s busiest recorded day came in early 2026, with wait times that surpassed those at Walt Disney World and other nearby Universal parks.
That benchmark, less than a year in, tells its own story. Orlando has always been defined by its theme parks. Epic Universe did not add to that tradition so much as it raised what the tradition is expected to deliver. TIME’s recognition and the early attendance figures are pointing in the same direction. The park is generating the kind of sustained interest that takes most destinations years to build, and it is only getting started.

