Appearance move to sidebar hide Coordinates: 39°20′20″N84°16′25″W / 39.339°N 84.2736°W / 39.339; -84.2736 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Water park in Ohio
WaterWorks (1989-2003)Crocodile Dundee's Boomerang Bay (2004-2006)Boomerang Bay (2007-2011)
Operating season
May through September
Area
35 acres (140,000 m2)[1]
Pools
5 pools
Water slides
36[2] water slides
Children's areas
5[1] children's areas
Website
www.sixflags.com/kingsisland/soak-city
Soak City is a water park at Kings Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio. Opening in 1989 as WaterWorks, the water park is included with the price of admission to Kings Island. It is owned and operated by Six Flags.
History
[edit]
Soak City originally opened in 1989 as a 12-acre (4.9 ha) water park under the name WaterWorks featuring 15 water slides, a wave pool, and a lazy river ride called Action River.[3] WaterWorks was the first themed area to be added to Kings Island since 1976, bringing the total to seven. The cost was roughly $4 million USD.[4]
The water park was expanded in 1997 to 30 acres (12 ha).[5] It was renamed in 2004 to Crocodile Dundee's Boomerang Bay, and again in 2007 to Boomerang Bay dropping Crocodile Dundee from the name. On September 2, 2011, Kings Island announced that the water park would undergo a $10-million expansion, which would include the renovation of the water park's main entrance, a revamp of the existing Lazy River ride, and the construction of additional amenities. A second, larger wave pool was also added, and the water park's name was changed to Soak City for the 2012 season.[6]
List of attractions
[edit] See also: List of former Kings Island attractions
Intensity rating[nt 1]
(mild) 1 2 3 4 5 (extreme)
Name
Picture
Opened
Description
Rating
Ref
Bluegill Lagoon
2025
Located in Splash River Junction. A reimagined ol’ fashioned swimmin’ hole, complete with a water tower.
1
[8]
Breakers Bay
1997
36,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) family-friendly wave pool. Known as Surfside Bay (1997–2003), Great Barrier Reef (2004–2011).
4
[9]
Coconut Cove
2004
Lagoon-style pool complete with cascading waterfalls and in-water lounging areas. Known as Kookaburra Bay (2004–2011)
1
[10]
Mondo Monsoon
2004
A four-passenger, raft ride – ProSlide Tornado model – which begins enclosed and ends with a steep drop into an open funnel. Known as Tazmanian Typhoon (2004–2011)
5
[11]
Paradise Plunge
1989
Four twisting body slides which descend into a splash pool. Known as The Helix (1989–2003), Down Under Thunder (2004–2011).
4
[12]
Pineapple Pipeline
1989
Three fully enclosed body slides. Known as Bonzai Pipeline (1989–2003), Bondi Pipeline (2004–2011).
3
[13]
Rendezvous Run
2004
A set of four head-first, racing slides up to 50-foot (15 m) high that are enclosed during the first portion of the ride before sending riders down a series of hills to the finish. Known as Coolangatta Racer (2004–2011)
4
[14]
Riverbank Slide Out
1997
Located in Splash River Junction. Children's inner tube slide and splash pool. Opened as part of Buccaneer Island (1997–2003). Known as Koala Splash (2004–2011) and Aruba Tuba (2012–2024).
2
[15]
RiverRacers
2025
Hold on tight! Riders board side-by-side rafts at the starting line where a conveyor belt launch sends them plunging down a 33-foot, 47-degree first drop. Giant windows help racers see if their raft is in the lead while the water coaster reaches its 30 mph, fastest speed. As each raft nears the bottom of the drop and starts to climb upward, water jets drench the riders and propel them up into an enclosed tunnel illuminated with special lighting effects. The race is on as racers zip through more twists and turns, rushing into an open-air, high-banking slingshot, whipping them around 180 degrees into a gravity-defying final mega drop to see who crosses the finish line first!
4
[16]
Salamander Sliders
2025
Located in Splash River Junction. Seven children water slides.
2
[17]
Splash Landing
2004
Family-oriented, multi-level water play area complete with slides, bridges and a giant dumping bucket. Known as Jackaroo Landing (2004–2011).
2
[18]
Splash River
1989
A 0.25-mile (0.40 km) inner tube lazy river ride revamped in 2012 that features raindrop mushrooms, geysers, waterfalls, and areas that allow interaction between riders and spectators. Known as Kings Mills Run (1989–2004), Crocodile Run (2004–2011).
2
[19]
Tadpool
1997
Located in Splash River Junction. Children's water play area with several water slides. Opened as part of Buccaneer Island (1997–2003). Known as Wallaby Wharf (2004–2011) and Castaway Cove (2012–2024)
1
[20]
Thunder Falls
1989
A pair of classic inner-tube slides. Formerly known as Sidewinder (1989–2003), Sydney Sidewinder (2004–2011)
3
[21]
Tidal Wave Bay
2012
42,000-square-foot (3,900 m2) wave pool.
4
[22]
Tropical Plunge
2016
A multi-slide complex with body and tube slides. It is identical to the installations at other Six Flags parks including Kings Dominion, Dorney Park, Carowinds, Cedar Point, Knott's Berry Farm, Worlds of Fun, and California's Great America.
5
[23]
Tropical Twister
1989
A pair of fully enclosed body slides made of translucent fiberglass that twist around each other during their descent. Known as Ultra Twister (1989–2003), Awesome Aussie Twister (2004–2011).
4
[24]
Zoom Flume
1990
A family raft ride that accommodates up to four riders per raft. Known as Rushing River (1990–2003), Known as Snowy River Rampage (2004–2011)
4
[25]
See also
[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Soak City (Kings Island).
Other Soak City locations
List of Six Flags water parks
Notes
[edit]
^Ratings according to the park's guest assistance guide, where "1" is the least intense and "5" is the most. See the Guest Assistance Guide[7] for more details.
References
[edit]
^ ab"Compare For Yourself". Kings Island. Archived from the original on 17 January 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
^"Soak City Waterpark". Retrieved 1 July 2016.
^"Outdoors/Sports". Cincinnati Magazine. 22 (8). Emmis Communications: 31. May 1989. ISSN 0746-8210. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^"Kings Island Water Park To Open". Wanderlust. Kokomo Tribune. April 3, 1989. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^"Kings Island History — Timeline". KICentral.com. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
^"Kings Island to expand water park in 2012". WHIO-TV. 2 September 2011. Retrieved 22 October 2011.