10 items in Phantasialand

B&M inverted coaster in Deep in Africa. Two-thirds of the layout is below ground level, creating intense near-miss moments with rock faces. Features a loop, zero-G roll, and two corkscrews. Sand-filled rails reduce noise.

Long mine train coaster winding through a large artificial mountain range in the Mexico area. Three lift hills, partially indoor and outdoor. Opened by Michael Jackson. Considered one of the best mine trains in the world.

Fully enclosed indoor coaster — formerly the longest indoor roller coaster in the world. Three lift hills, four trains. Now features an optional VR experience with bats as protagonists. Originally opened as Space Center with a space theme, rethemed to Temple of the Night Hawk in 2001, rebranded to Crazy Bats with VR in 2019.

World's first launched flying coaster and longest flying coaster. Set in the steampunk Rookburgh area, riders are in a prone position facing the ground. Two LSM launches and two inversions through tightly themed urban environment.

Family boomerang (shuttle) coaster in Klugheim alongside Taron. Train travels the track forward then reverses and travels it backward. Short but family-friendly with a forward launch.

Multi-launch steel coaster in the Norse-themed Klugheim area. Held the record for fastest multi-launch coaster at opening. Track crosses itself 116 times at 58 intersection points — both world records for a launched coaster. No inversions but intense airtime and near-miss rockwork.

Indoor spinning coaster in Wuze Town. Uses an elevator lift instead of a traditional chain lift. Features trick-track sections that force the car to spin in specific ways. Riders spin freely after the first drop.

Indoor spinning coaster in Wuze Town, sister ride to Winja's Fear with a different layout. Also uses an elevator lift. Both rides share the Wuze Town building and occasionally pass close to each other.

One of the park's original steel coasters built into a mountain-range rock facade and tunnels to muffle noise. Originally opened as Bobbahn 1 in 1975, renamed Gebirgsbahn in 1989. Destroyed by the 2001 cable fire.
Schwarzkopf powered (e-powered) coaster built alongside Gebirgsbahn. Originally Bobbahn 2, themed as a grand canyon journey. The faulty wiring in this ride caused the devastating 2001 fire that destroyed both it and Gebirgsbahn.