Universal Orlando Resort

Getting to Know Universal – Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey

Share This!

Muggles in the wizarding world, is Dumbledoor mad? In this week’s Getting to Know Universal, we are covering the first Harry Potter ride, Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey. Announced in 2007 and opened in June 2010, The Wizarding World of Hogsmeade and Forbidden Journey let guests walk into a fully immersive Harry Potter land for the first time. Hogsmeade replaced the Merlin’s Woods section of Islands of Adventure, and Forbidden Journey was placed in an expansion area of the park.

Quick Glance

  • Location: Islands of Adventure
  • Attraction Type: Multi-media dark ride with motion simulator segments
  • Scope: Super Headliner
  • Touring Plans Rating: ★★★★★
  • Height Requirement: 48 inches

The Experience

Today is unprecedented – Albus Dumbledore, the headmaster of the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, has opened up the school and surrounding areas to non-magic folk (aka muggles) to find the next great witch or wizard. In Hogsmeade, the restaurants and shops are open for the first time to tourists, while Hogwarts itself is showing open house tours to interested families.

The attraction’s queue is a walking tour of Hogwarts, from the dungeons of the castle to the Griffindor Common Room. Guests start in the basement, where the classroom of Potions Master and the Mirror of Erised is located. Soon we are back outside, making our way through the school’s greenhouse filled with pitcher plants, Mandrakes, and (thankfully) drinking fountains. After ascending ramps in the greenhouse we re-enter the castle for the final time, passing the Hogwarts House Cup tallies as we enter Dumbledore’s office.

All of the original cast reprise their roles in this attraction, including Daniel Radcliff as Harry Potter and Michael Gambon as Albus Dumbledore. The queue and attraction make copious use of a projection technology called Musion 3D, a method that creates life-like hologram projections in real space. So when you enter Dumbledore’s office, you are not just walking through but also receiving a speech from him.

Dumbledore welcomes us to the open house and presses us to visit the History of Magic class to learn more about the school and this world. Harry, Ron, and Hermonie have other ideas as they hijack our little tour and decide the REAL way to experience Hogwarts is not in a classroom, it is on the quidditch pitch. After a short safety lesson in the Gryffindor Common Room, we board our flying benches in the Room of Requirement.

 

Our benches might seem quaint compared to other enchanted flying objects, but behind the scenes is one of the most complex ride systems ever used. Each bench sits on the end of a KUKA robotic arm, those long robots seen on automobile assembly lines welding fittings or attaching doors. The ride system functions similar to the retired Sum of All Thrills attraction at Epcot – guests are seated at the end of the robotic arm which then tilts, rotates, pitches, and yaws to simulate flying. Unlike Sum of All Thrills, this Kuka arm is on a track that moves through full immersive sets and seamlessly into 4K video domes.

Along our trip to the quidditch pitch we are chased by a dragon, get lost in the Forbidden Forest, tormented by Dementors, and narrowly escape a collapsing Chamber of Secrets. Harry then personally flies us back to the Great Hall, where Dumbledore greets us, knowing exactly what he set up.

The Opinion

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey is a massive E-ticket thrill ride that still holds up over a decade later. While many attractions were high-tech and immersive before, the queue and ride through Hogwarts were unlike anything anyone saw at the time. For the first time, attraction scenes were filmed during the production of the movies using the actual actors, not sound-alikes in a sound stage. Technologies were combined in new ways to bring paintings to life, actors into the room, and guests through the skies.

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey is a landmark attraction, a pin in the timeline of themed entertainment, and a pivot point for the whole industry. It changed the theme park game and is rated still among the best rides in the world. We believe it is not to be missed.

Warning to motion sickness sufferers: Forbidden Journey is second only to Mission: Space Orange for the amount of motion sickness complaints. We suggest touring the castle and then exiting right before boarding, just talk to a Team Member in the Gryffindor Common room.

Restrictions & Accommodations

  • Guests riding Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey must be at least 48 inches tall to ride
  • Prosthetic limbs must be removed or secured during the ride
  • Due to restraints guests with waistlines larger than 40 inches might not fit on the motion simulator part of the attraction; use the test seat outside the ride entrance to ensure you can be accommodated.
  • All guests must transfer to the ride vehicle from ECV or wheelchair
  • Service Animals are not permitted on this attraction

Touring Tips

Forbidden Journey remains incredibly popular in the park thanks to the original film actors and takes place at Hogwarts. While its next-door neighbor, Hagrid’s Magical Creature Motorbike Adventure, has stolen most of the buzz, the lines for Forbidden Journey quickly rise in the morning into the afternoon. Waits for the attraction peak in the late morning through the early afternoon, especially if it rains or Hagrid experiences a technical delay.

If you are participating in Early Park Admission, ride Forbidden Journey after riding Hagrid and VelociCoaster. If you are not participating in Early Park Admission, or it is not offered, save the ride till the evening before the park closes.

What are your thoughts on Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey? Love it or skip it? Leave your comments below!

You May Also Like...

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 – Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey

  • It’s been quite a few years – the queue used to have a “Castle Tour” option, where one could walk through the line as quickly or slowly as one wanted, and then exit just before the boarding area. Is this option still available?

    Reply
    • Nick, the castle tours used the unused Express queue, so now that they use Express it probably isn’t available.

      Reply
  • What is the “stationary seating” like? (from “Due to restraints guests with waistlines larger than 40 inches might not fit on the motion simulator part of the attraction; use the test seat outside the ride entrance to ensure you can be accommodated. The stationary seating is still available.”) Does this mean that people who don’t fit in the regular seat might/will fit in the stationary seat? How does the attraction experience vary between the regular and stationary seating? Thanks!

    Reply
    • Hi Nancy, this was an error on my part and the phrase has been removed. Sorry for the confusion.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Joseph Matt Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *