Chessington World of Adventures/Other

2004–present
Dragon's Fury is a spinning roller coaster which opened in 2004 as the centrepiece of the then new Land of the Dragons.

1995–1999
Rameses Revenge is a top-spin ride located in the then relatively new Forbidden Kingdom area.

1987–????
The Runaway Mine Train opened in 1987 and was a simple figure-of-eight powered childrens roller coaster. Like many early rides at the theme park, it had elaborate theming.

????–2012
At some point after opening, the name was shortened to simply the Runaway Train.

2014–present
The ride closed for the entirety of the 2013 season for a full refurbishment. When the ride re-opened in 2014, the original theming had been replaced with much more basic theming.

1990–2005
The originally opened in 1990 as part of Chessingtons new area Transylvania. The ride was a boat ride travelling through a series of elaborately themed rooms each depicting in a humorous way the process of making 'fizzy pop'.

2006–2016
For the 2006 season, the ride was refurbished. The ride was redesigned as a soap factory due to its being sponsored at the time by Imperial Leather. Most of the assets from the original incarnation, with the exception of the titular Professor Burp, were retained albeit repainted and the humorous jokes altered to incorporate soap-related references. The sponsorship ended in 2014 with references wither removed or covered up, the ride remaining the same otherwise.

2017–present
In 2017, the ride was completely rethemed into a moving theatre style incorporating aspects from the children's story, The Gruffalo.

1998–present
Often known as simply 'Rattlesnake', the ride is a simple Wild Mouse rollercoaster though notable for being situated in a deep pit due to planning height restrictions.

1987–1993
Tomb Blaster opened in 1987 as The 5th Dimension, a surreal moving theatre following an automated computer troubleshooter named Zappomatic 552 through a series of malfunctioning computer generated worlds. In 1988 this was changed to a simpler story in an effort to increase disappointing visitor numbers, guests now followed Zappomatic on his quest to defeat The Gorg.

1994–1999
Ironically, the old analogue technology used throughout The 5th Dimension proved troublesome to maintain and it was decided to replace the story entirely rather than modernise the existing. In Terror Tomb, guests followed a fortune hunter named Abdab through a haunted tomb on his quest to find the emerald hidden inside.

2000–2001
Terror Tomb was given a minor refurbishment for the 2000 season; new themed trains (Terror Tomb used The 5th Dimension trains albeit painted gold) and the new name being the most notable changes.

2002–2015
In 2002, Forbidden Tomb was changed significantly. The ride was refurbished to become a shoot-the-target dark ride. Most theming assets, besides animatronics related to the now removed Abdab story, were retained albeit with new spider-like targets. The Iron Maiden finale was removed in favour of a new large but simple Cobra animatronic. A new soundtrack was also introduced. Finally, the name was changed again to the more suitable Tomb Blaster.

2016–present
In 2016 followed another refurbishment. Largely as a result of improving health and safety, the refurbishment comprised a new target system and new, rather bright, ultra-violet lighting.

1990–1998
The Vampire opened in 1990 in the then new area of Transylvania. It was originally a hanging/swinging floored rollercoaster with elaborately themed station and landscaping.

1999–present
The ride received a minor refurbishment for the 1999 season, most notably a new logo and the general discarding of the determiner. 2000 was the was last season in which Vampire operated in more-or-less its original form. The ride closed for a full refurbishment for the entirety of the 2001 season, re-opening n 2002 with much less elaborate theming in place and new bespoke hanging/swinging floorless trains.