Universal Orlando Resort

Getting to Know Universal: Fast & Furious: Supercharged

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Today in Getting to Know Universal we are covering the ins and outs of Universal Studios Florida’s latest attraction, Fast & Furious: Supercharged. Based on the worldwide film franchise phenomenon, Supercharged opened to guests on April 23, 2018, replacing the campy Disaster!: A Major Motion Picture Ride… Starring You.

Originally telling the stories of underground street racing and illegal DVD players, the Fast & Furious series evolved into character-driven action movies… with cars. The Family, lead character Dominic Toretto’s (played by Vin Diesel) loose collection of misfits, features loud and brash characters played by Vin, Dwayne Johnson, Michelle Rodriguez, Ludacris, Gal Gadot, and Jason Statham.

Photo copyright Universal Orlando.

The Family is frequently enlisted by various world governments to solve international crises… with cars. Giant vehicle action sequences with death-defying stunts drive the plot as the character interactions propel the story. Plus there are lots of jokes and family meals with lots of Corona.

The Experience

Fast & Furious: Supercharged is a simulated car race through San Francisco aboard a party bus. Located in the San Francisco section of Universal Studios Florida, guests approach an apparently deserted warehouse that is the hidden home to the Toretto Family. The queue wraps around cars Dom won from his street races as they await their supercharging. Inside the break room guests learn Dom has won yet another race and we are invited to the party. Careful though, the FBI and rival racer Owen Shaw are hot on the heals of Dom.

Photo copyright Universal Orlando.

Guests board custom party busses, with lights and music, to travel to the remote party. Despite keeping a low profile, the FBI crash the party and Shaw is revealed to be hot on our heels. The Family helps us escape as our buses are then pulled through San Francisco on a turbocharged tow truck, avoiding traps, traffic, and rival racers. After a draw-bridge jump to safety we disembark as part of The Family.

The attraction exits into the Customer Gear gift shop where guests can pick up Fast & Furious themed gifts, custom build miniature cars, or pose with a wax figure of Vin Diesel.

The Opinion

Lets be real here: this attraction is not very good. After nearly a decade of amazing Universal Orlando additions, this attraction disappointed guests and Fast & Furious fans alike. The queue is too long, the preshows are poorly done (though Team Members try their best with the material), the ride is underdeveloped, and the action does not live up to the Fast & Furious name. Supercharged is the peak point of “Universal has too many attractions with screens” arguments. A campy, cheesy ride could work but this attraction is a try hard, one that falls short of the sum of its parts.

Photo copyright Universal Orlando.

Restrictions & Accommodations

Guests riding Fast & Furious: Supercharged must be 40 inches tall with a supervising companion, 48 inches to ride alone. Guests in wheelchairs and ECVs must transfer to the ride vehicle to ride. Prosthetic limbs must be detached or secured before riding. The attraction features fog and water effects and loud noises.

Rider Swap is offered for parties with members under the height requirement, see a Team Member at the entrance for assistance. The Child Swap room plays family friendly scenes from Fast & Furious movies and even has a cool car racing game.

The distance between the ride vehicle seats is unusually small for an attraction of this type. Some larger and taller guests might find the ride vehicles awkward or uncomfortable.

When to Visit

According to the Touring Plans wait times page, visit Fast & Furious: Supercharged during the first two hours the park is open or the last two hours. Note that this attraction sometimes uses the Virtual Line feature, check the Touring Plans Lines app in the morning for wait times and if Virtual Line is being used.

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Joseph Matt

Joe covers theme parks through the lens of his quality engineering day job. He has over five years of writing experience at Touring Plans and has gone on dozens of trips to Orlando over his life. When not at amusement parks you can find Joe at breweries, enjoying live theater, playing video games, and cooking.

4 thoughts on “Getting to Know Universal: Fast & Furious: Supercharged

  • I could not have been more displeased with the level of crap for this ride. I had completely expected a ride with individual ride cars in a track of some kid with speed and drifting. Such a disappointing experience.

    Reply
  • We went to attraction in 2018 and was hopping they’d do something to improve it. Too bad. We were able to see parts of the building over the screens that completely took away any illusion of being in a real chase. This is worse that Kong

    Reply
  • My husband and I were so excited to finally get to ride this back in September 2019. We went through the line with our anticipation rising, my husband is a car junkie so we just know we are going to have some type of speed, thrill ride like test track. We boarded the “party bus” and literally rode the ride like this (-_-) the whole time. Sigh, I agree with this article.

    Reply
  • Agree with this opinion. I’m not a big fan of the movies but enjoyed the previous Disaster! attraction in this space so went in with an open mind but was disappointed. Although the you nephew enjoyed it!

    Reply

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