Find yourself traveling across Asia and needing a Disney fix? Hong Kong Disneyland might be the place for you. In this post, we’ll break down how to spend a day at Hong Kong Disneyland, from buying your tickets to Early Park Entry and rope drop, all the way to nighttime entertainment! Here’s how to plan your perfect day at Hong Kong Disneyland!
About This Post and Hong Kong Disneyland
As I think is the case with all Disney parks, you can get a nearly complete feel for Hong Kong Disneyland in a single day, but you probably won’t do “everything” in that one day. There are going to be tradeoffs, and you’re going to need to know your priorities.
While I want this post to appeal to all guests, my own perspective is that of a Western guest who is already familiar with Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and Disneyland Paris. Rides that are present in those parks are lower priority for me at Hong Kong Disneyland.
I’ll always still hope to ride Dumbo and The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, but I’ll personally take two rides on Mystic Manor before I spend much time waiting for them. I try to give both perspectives when appropriate—contrasting “do everything” strategy with my personal approach.
Hong Kong Disneyland Crowd Levels & Quick Strategy Math
Hong Kong Disneyland is not an especially large park, and there are days at Hong Kong Disneyland when almost every ride averages under 15 minutes. On those days, a lot of the hedging and comparison of options in this post might not be too valuable. The overall route is still very much worth following, and it’s probably a sound approach in all but the busiest days.
Having followed waits (via ThrillData) at Hong Kong Disneyland in the weeks leading up to our last visit, busy days can sneak up with seemingly little rhyme or reason. Hong Kong Disneyland is mostly a locals park, so good weather can make a huge difference.
For reference, here’s the busiest day I could find at Hong Kong Disneyland in the last year. The average wait for the 17 rides posting waits was 56 minutes and the park was open 11.5 hours. That’s not good math for getting anywhere near close to “everything” done.
But even the simplest strategy goes a long way. If you’d been able to ride just Frozen Ever After during Early Park Entry and planned enough to ride Runaway Mine Cars and Mystic Manor with no more than 60 minute waits, you’d have 14 remaining rides to deal with, averaging 46 minute waits (so about 10.7 hours expected of waits total), in 9.5 hours of your day. You’d probably miss out on some things if you visited the remaining rides in random order, but that’s the busiest day of the year with very minimal strategy.
About The Times In This Post
I’m going to use operating hours of 10:30AM to 8:30PM for this post. As of publication, Hong Kong Disneyland usually opens 30 minutes earlier—at 10AM—on weekends, so you’d shift all the target times in this post 30 minutes back in that case.
Always confirm park hours before your visit. Always confirm specific attraction hours the morning of your visit—that’s particularly important at Hong Kong Disneyland, as this post will address.
Hong Kong Disneyland Priorities
Before we get to strategy, it’s helpful to take a broad look at priorities.
Let’s start with a big one—characters. If you are here to meet Duffy and Friends, then this needs to be your top priority. Zoe was able to meet ‘Olu Mel at the start of Early Park Entry one morning, but these waits can exceed two hours.
I won’t spend much time on characters in this post, mostly because the popular ones tend to maintain long waits throughout their often-limited operating hours. Locals are willing to wait multiple hours for these characters because they’ve already seen the rest of the park. You’ll either want to head to a greeting at rope drop or just buckle down and spend the time midday when waits are high everywhere else, too.
Next, shows. You can start by locking in the nighttime show (currently Momentous: Party in the Night Sky) and the parade (currently the Friendtastic! Parade). I don’t think either is particularly amazing as these things go, but I do think both fit easily into a day at the park and are worth making time for.
Of the other entertainment, Mickey and the Wondrous Book is the one most deserving of your time. Festival of the Lion King is a good show, but not as good as its Animal Kingdom counterpart. Moana: A Homecoming Celebration is a fun show, but the seating space is very limited. I’ll only include Mickey and the Wondrous Book in this post, but you might fit the other two into your afternoon if you have time.
Temporary Update: Per Hong Kong Disneyland, “Due to operational adjustments and to facilitate ‘StellaLou's Wonderful Wishes Ballet’, ‘Mickey and the Wondrous Book’ will be temporarily suspended from April 12, 2026 to late June 2026.” The Ballet runs April 30 to May 31, so there will be times when neither show runs. We expect StellaLou's Wonderful Wishes Ballet to be very popular—StellaLou is a friend of Duffy, and as with the character greetings at the park, local crowds will prioritize this limited-time show. If I were visiting, I’d be strongly considering Disney Premier Access for this one.
The current castle stage show is Disney Friends Live: Party at the Castle! It’s worth the 15 minutes in the hub.
The most notable non-ride attractions are Animation Academy (the drawing class), Philharmagic, and Tarzan’s Treehouse. None is must-do, and I’d actively avoid Tarzan’s Treehouse simply because of the time involved in getting there and back.
Last but obviously not least—rides. My approach to the rides is to prioritize the unique (or unique-ish) rides in the park first. I have a bias toward excluding rides also in the western parks, but if you’re visiting both Hong Kong and Shanghai, for example, you only need to ride RC Racer and Slinky Dog Spin once. But Toy Soldier Parachute Drop is at Hong Kong Disneyland and not Shanghai Disneyland, so you’ll want to prioritize that ride in Hong Kong.
Middle Priority are rides I like and that I’ll work to fit in around my priorities. Finally, there are the Lower Priority rides, which I’ll ride only if I’m confident I won’t miss out on anything in the other two groups.
Altogether I’ve got three groups comprising 20 rides:
Top Priority (Must Ride)
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars
Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle!
Iron Man Experience
Mystic Manor
Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs
Middle Priority (Should Ride)
Frozen Ever After
Hong Kong Disneyland Railroad
“it's a small world”
Hyperspace Mountain
Jungle River Cruise
RC Racer
Toy Soldier Parachute Drop
Lower Priority (Plan To Skip Unless There’s Time)
Orbitron
Main Street Vehicles
Slinky Dog Spin
Cinderella Carousel
Dumbo the Flying Elephant
Mad Hatter Tea Cups
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Rafts to Tarzan’s Treehouse
Importantly, “prioritize” does not mean “go to first”. The worst week for Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle! since June 2021 was an average wait of 29 minutes. Even weeks averaging over 15 minutes are relatively uncommon. I want to be sure I fit it into my day, but I’m not rushing to it.
I encourage you to use Thrill Data in the weeks leading up to your visit to get a feel for recent wait time trends. But layered on top of the above priority buckets, I have the following list of mid-to-high priority rides with waits that actually get pretty high:
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars
Mystic Manor
Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs
RC Racer
Toy Soldier Parachute Drop
Frozen Ever After
I’ve gone ahead and numbered these because this is basically the order these rides are on my mind approaching the park. Mystic Manor will have very low waits some days, but it’s an awesome ride.
Frozen Ever After gets the longer waits, but it’s close enough to the versions at EPCOT and Disney Adventure World that it just barely makes this list (fans of thrill rides might instead put Hyperspace Mountain in that last spot).
Premier Access and Early Park Entry
Premier Access is Hong Kong’s version of FASTPASS / Lightning Lanes. There are two ways to purchase it—individually or as a package. A single ride costs around HK$109 ($14 USD), and packages offer some price break but usually include rides for which Premier Access isn’t necessary. Almost every ride has Premier Access as an option, and sellouts are very rare.
Hong Kong’s Early Park Entry is notable in that anyone can purchase access to it, and hotel guests do not have complimentary access. As of publication, Early Park Entry includes Frozen Ever After, Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs, Cinderella Carousel, Dumbo the Flying Elephant, and The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.
Early Park Entry costs around HK$200 for an hour of access. If you do the quick math, you can see this is something of a substitute for Premier Access at Frozen Ever After and Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs, albeit with an earlier wakeup and some wait in lines during Early Entry.
If you only have a single day, I think Early Park Entry is definitely worth the price. It’s not a huge additional cost to your visit and you get to easily check off two popular rides. Most important, though, is that Hong Kong Disneyland rarely opens before 10AM to begin with. Buying Early Park Entry to get yourself in the park at a reasonable hour just makes sense.
Before You Get To The Park
Before you get to the park, you’ll need to buy your tickets and plan how you’re going to get there.
Buying Park Tickets and Early Park Entry
I recommend buying Hong Kong Disneyland park tickets on Klook. Unless there’s a huge discount, I usually try to buy tickets directly from sites themselves when traveling. But the Hong Kong Disneyland website would not let me make a credit card purchase, an issue I’ve seen widely reported. I wound up buying on Klook, and within seconds was sent Disney-styled PDFs with QR codes I was able to scan to enter the park.
Klook also sells Early Park Entry for Hong Kong Disneyland, and there’s where I bought that, too. Remember, Disney hotel guests do not get complimentary Early Park Entry at Hong Kong Disneyland.
Getting to Hong Kong Disneyland
Hong Kong Disneyland is located on Lantau Island, about a 15-minute drive from Hong Kong International Airport. Taxis are available, and we used Uber (through our usual iPhone app).
Coming from the city, the drive is about 30 minutes, or you can take the MTR train. The train is very easy to use, with plenty of English signage, and Hong Kong Disneyland has its own line that operates between Hong Kong Disneyland and the Sunny Bay station on the Tung Chung Line. The train trip takes about an hour from Central Hong Kong. If you have luggage, staff may ask you to take the elevators, adding to your travel time.
Spending Your Day at Hong Kong Disneyland
Finally, it’s time to spend the day at Hong Kong Disneyland. We all know you’ll want to arrive before open…but what is open, exactly?
Hong Kong Disneyland’s Three-Part Opening
As noted above, Hong Kong Disneyland usually opens at 10:30AM, with 10AM openings common on weekends and busier weekdays. Guests with Early Park Entry will have access for an hour before that.
On top of that, though, some lands don’t open until even later. In particular, it’s common for the trio of Grizzly Gulch, Mystic Point, and Toy Story Land to open later than the rest of the park.
This means a guest with Early Park Entry has the chance for three rope drops—the start of Early Park Entry, the regular park opening time, and the later land opening time for those lands. We’ll cover all three of these in the sections that follow.
Arrival and Early Park Entry
If you’re coming from a nearby hotel, I’d plan to arrive at the gates about 15-20 minutes before the start of Early Park Entry (or, if you’re not using Early Park Entry, before the park opens). From anywhere else, plan to arrive at least 30 minutes early in case of delays.
Last time we visited, Early Park Entry guests used a queue all the way to the right upon arriving at the park. These guests were let in at the start of Early Park Entry. At some point in the morning, the procedure shifts so that all guests are allowed onto Main Street, and the Early Entry check is done at the hub.
If you have Early Park Entry, my recommendation is to use it to visit Frozen Ever After and then Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs, with Dumbo third if you have time.
You can just head straight to Wandering Oaken’s, but then longer Frozen Ever After waits might mess up the rest of your Early Park Entry and morning strategy. If you really don’t care about Frozen Ever After at all, then it might have just made more sense to buy Premier Access for Wandering Oaken’s instead of Early Park Entry.
Put another way, with an extra hour in your day, Frozen Ever After becomes a “must ride”. You buy Early Park Entry (rather than just a Premier Access or two) because you want a “full” day at the park. Now you can easily fit Frozen Ever After in by doing it first, so that’s what you should do.
When I tried this on a day with Early Park Entry starting at 9AM, I boarded Frozen Ever After at 9:24AM (I had a slight delay for photos around the castle) and then Wandering Oaken’s at 9:55AM. We were able to get on Dumbo at 10:05AM (Hyperspace Mountain was closed or we would have gone straight there).
Scheduled Park Opening
Since several of Hong Kong Disneyland’s lands—Mystic Point, Toy Story Land, and Grizzly Gulch—usually open 30 minutes after the rest of the park, you’ll have a 30-minute window at park open before you want to head to those. If those three lands are opening at the same time as the rest of the park, skip this section and go straight to the next section.
And you want to head to those right when they open in order to get short waits, so don’t plan to overstay the 30 minutes in Adventureland, Tomorrowland, and Fantasyland.
The go-to at park opening time is Hyperspace Mountain. Hyperspace Mountain is the highest-priority ride that gets substantive waits and opens at regular park opening time (assuming you already handled World of Frozen during Early Park Entry).
You’ll typically have half an hour to get on Hyperspace Mountain and then over to the second rope drop on the other side of the park. I’ve never had the opportunity to actually try this, but it looks sound, with the ride often posting waits under 15 minutes when it opens.
The other good option is to ride some of the low-priority rides, like Fantasyland’s Dumbo the Flying Elephant, Mad Hatter Tea Cups, and The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. In Tomorrowland, the best option at this point is Orbitron, which often gets higher waits than the Ant-Man or Iron Man attractions.
If you want to do everything in this park, getting two or maybe three Fantasyland rides done now is probably better than getting only Hyperspace Mountain done. Again, remember that buying Premier Access might be a good option if you worry you’ll miss out on a ride, and it’s cheaper to buy it for one ride than several.
For what it’s worth, if you skipped Early Park Entry, you’re probably better off saving World of Frozen for the late evening (or earlier, if it makes sense). The problem is that even a moderate wait on either ride would have you “wasting” both the park opening rope drop and the second rope drop.
Altogether, if you can be done with Frozen Ever After, Wandering Oaken’s, and Hyperspace Mountain by the time “second rope drop” arrives, you’re in pretty good shape.
The Rest of the Park Opens
The next big choice comes when Grizzly Gulch, Mystic Point, and Toy Story Land open. The dilemma is this…
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars, in Grizzly Gulch, is a fantastic ride that gets long waits. It’s a total must-ride, and it’s wholly unique to Hong Kong Disneyland. But it’s only one ride.
RC Racer and Toy Soldier Parachute Drop, in Toy Story Land, by contrast, are two rides. Two is more than one, but neither of these is quite “must-do” in my book. Both are quite popular in every park they’re in, so my opinion might be wrong. Both are in Disney Adventure World, which I visit more frequently than Hong Kong Disneyland.
Waits for all of these rides go up quite quickly once they open, and none drops notably before evening.
The best approach from a “do everything” mindset is probably to start with RC Racer—the faster loading of the two Toy Story rides at issue here—and then Toy Soldier Parachute Drop, saving Runaway Mine Cars for sometime later. Worst case, you have the option of buying Premier Access for Runaway Mine Cars.
Personally—as a family who gets their share of RC Racer and Toy Soldier Parachute Drop in Paris—we prefer to take care of Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars. On a not-so-busy day, we’d still have little trouble fitting the other two in. On a busy day, we’ll be glad we took care of this fantastic ride early.
From either direction, you’ll converge on Mystic Manor and ride that.
So—how long will this block of your day take? With Hong Kong Disneyland’s varying wait times, it’s a little hard to predict. Looking at historical wait time data, you’re expecting to be done with RC Racer and Toy Soldier Parachute Drop by about 11:40AM. This is a tad slower than the timeline I’d expect (and experienced personally) if you were mid-crowd heading to just Runaway Mine Cars in Grizzly Gulch, instead of Toy Story Land.
After Mystic Manor, it’ll be about 12:10PM, about time for lunch, with your accomplishments so far:
Frozen Ever After
Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs
Hyperspace Mountain
RC Racer
Toy Soldier Parachute Drop
Mystic Manor
This is 6 of 20 rides, but based on our discussion above I think the only ride you really need to care about now is Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars. With a successful morning behind you, it’s probably time for lunch.
Lunch at Hong Kong Disneyland
As a general rule, I delay lunch as long as possible at basically any theme park I go to. As long as waits are low and you can be getting on rides, do that. It might even make sense to do a show before lunch if the timing works out. But make sure you’re not running into scheduling conflicts, like accidentally delaying lunch until parade time.
There are table service restaurants in Hong Kong Disneyland, but we haven’t tried them. You’ll want to be careful committing your time to a long meal, but if you’ve lucked (or paid) your way into low waits for rides, a comfortable sit-down meal can make sense.
The quick service restaurants are mostly concentrated in the core of Fantasyland, Adventureland, and Tomorrowland, with Golden Crocus Inn at World of Frozen also a notable option. PDF menus are available via the app and website, but we found the Mobile Order menus sometimes showed options that didn’t make the PDFs.
Mobile Order worked very well for us at Hong Kong Disneyland, and we were able to use ApplePay on a card with no foreign transaction fees on mobile order (and for all our other purchases, too). For the purpose of this post, I’ll assume lunch takes you until about 1PM.
Kicking Off the Afternoon at Hong Kong Disneyland
Lunch time at Mouse Hacking means one thing—LISTS! Take out your favorite note-taking app and start making lists of the rides, closing times, shows, showtimes, characters, and anything else you need to have a plan for.
Let’s quickly cover the core non-ride things we have yet to cover: the parade, the castle stage show, Mickey and the Wondrous Book, and the nighttime show.
For this post, we’ll use a parade time of 1:30PM. That’s not ideal based on finishing lunch at 1PM, but you shouldn’t have trouble finding a ride or two with short waits before heading to the hub.
With a slightly early arrival and time to depart, expect the 28-minute Mickey and the Wondrous Book show to take about 40 minutes whenever you fit it in.
The castle stage show is conveniently located (at the castle…in the middle of the park), so its 15-minute runtime shouldn’t cost you much more than 20 minutes overall.
The nighttime show is currently scheduled for park close at 8:30PM. Whether you arrive early, and how early, is just going to be a matter of preference and what you have left as the day goes on.
If you get one ride done before the parade (we’ll say it’s Nano Battle! just for this example), you’ll get to 2PM with 13 rides to experience in 6.5 hours, minus one hour for the two aforementioned shows, so 5.5 hours.
If crowds are low enough, you probably already had a better morning than we outlined, and you might have a good chance at getting every ride in the park done today. If crowds are high enough, you hopefully have still been able to hit the highlights, and finishing up the must-do list in the afternoon won’t be a challenge.
In any case, while the morning was all about carving a precise route through the lands and major attractions as they opened, the afternoon is much more about flexibility around the fixed showtimes and managing the wait times as they come to you.
If you’re a tourist, keep in mind that you don’t want to just rush through all the rides. The lands have other fun elements and photo ops that are worth a few minutes, and you’ll probably want to spend a few minutes in the stores, too.
As discussed a bit earlier (but worth recalling again as we head into the afternoon), if you’ve been to or plan to visit other Disney parks, you might not want to use your time riding things that are at those parks. Of the 14 rides I didn’t cover in the morning of this itinerary, eight are nearly identical to rides that exist in both Walt Disney World and Disneyland.
If you’re looking to save on steps and time, you want to make sure you only have to pass through the trio of Grizzly Gulch - Mystic Point - Toy Story Land one more time. If you’ve followed this itinerary, you’ve got the must-do Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars left, along with the not-so-important Slinky Dog Spin in those lands.
You can see the waits for Runaway Mine Cars typically peak from about 3PM to 5PM. If you can get to it before that peak, it’s probably a good idea. But the choice of what to do right after the parade really comes down to this: are there short waits you can take care of now?
If there are short waits (say, 20 minutes or under), then it can make sense to just go and hop through those while you’re in the Fantasyland-Tomorrowland area. If everything is sitting a bit higher, or if you’re very open to skipping most of those rides, then just head to Runaway Mine Cars to get it done. Because I prioritize Runaway Mine Cars so much, I very much favor just heading there and checking that box.
A typical wait for Runaway Mine Cars around this time is no more than 30 minutes. Ride it, and then if you spend an hour in these three lands, including the ride on Slinky Dog Spin if it makes sense, you’ll get to about 3:30PM with your afternoon having looked like:
Lunch
Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle!
Parade
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars
Slinky Dog Spin (maybe)
Time spent in Mystic Point, Grizzly Gulch, and Toy Story Land
Late Afternoon at Hong Kong Disneyland
Now you’ve got around 11 rides to go, all in Fantasyland, Tomorrowland, Adventureland, and Main Street USA. As with the earlier part of the afternoon, it’s good to focus on shrinking the park as the day goes on.
Unless its wait is absurd, I recommend checking off Jungle River Cruise around now. This timeframe is also when you’d probably want to try to fit in Festival of the Lion King, Moana: A Homecoming Celebration, and Tarzan’s Treehouse.
Personally, I think the time on the raft and time in the treehouse generally aren’t well spent, but I say this as someone who has walked through variations of this treehouse hundreds of times.
Once you’ve taken care of those two, you’re down to 9 rides in Fantasyland, Tomorrowland, and Main Street USA, plus the Mickey and the Wondrous Book stage show (in Fantasyland), the castle stage show if you haven’t fit it in yet, and the nighttime show.
You don’t need a solid plan for this part of the day, just go with the flow a bit depending on where the waits are. Here are some important things to note:
Main Street Vehicles often stop running early (around 6PM). Check the hours in the app the day of your visit, and plan accordingly.
The Hong Kong Disneyland Railroad has two stations at Main Street and Fantasyland, a full trip takes just under 20 minutes.
“it’s a small world” takes about 10 minutes, be careful trying to squeeze it into a narrow time slot.
Otherwise, you’ll want to know which rides are at the top of your list, and prioritize fitting those around the showtimes. For the sake of completeness, here’s what this looks like on our running itinerary:
Jungle River Cruise (other Adventureland optional)
Castle Stage Show
Mix of Fantasyland / Tomorrowland / Main Street rides
Mickey and the Wondrous Book
Mix of Fantasyland / Tomorrowland / Main Street rides
The other option for this part of the day is to re-ride things you already experienced. On our most recent trip to Hong Kong Disneyland, we landed at HKG and went to our hotel and then the park, entering at about 4PM. In the time that followed we experienced:
Castle stage show
Festival of the Lion King
Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle!,
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars
Iron Man Experience
Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs
Mystic Manor
ICYMI - those rides are exactly my five “Top Priority (Must Ride)” rides from above. If I only had one day and managed to do those once in the morning and once in the afternoon, I wouldn’t really be bummed to have missed out on Mad Hatter Tea Cups (and this was a day Thrill Data put at a 9/10 on “Wait Factor”).
Evening at Hong Kong Disneyland
The nighttime show can be quite popular, and we saw crowds pack all of Main Street one night (above). We don’t recommend pushing your rides and dinner all the way until park close unless you really don’t care about the view for the show.
There are plenty of quick service restaurants in Tomorrowland, Fantasyland, and Adventureland not too far from the hub. And the stores along Main Street are a good place to shop. Plan these into your evening so that you’ll have the opportunity to keep an eye on Main Street and hub crowds. As with lunch, consider a table service meal only if you have time to spare.
You won’t be the only one shopping, so account for time waiting to pay. If your schedule allows, ask Cast Members if the stores will be open after the nighttime show.
Dinner
Shopping on Main Street
Nighttime show
Closing Thoughts
Hong Kong Disneyland is still, most days, a one-day park. But it’s not a slouch by any means. While its 20ish rides might not be a huge figure for a castle park, they’re more than enough—along with shows and characters—to keep you having fun throughout the day.
The key to a great day at Hong Kong Disneyland is recognizing that it does some things very well. Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars and Mystic Manor are two of Disney’s best rides anywhere. Even the low-wait Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle! is a refreshing take on Disney’s classic blaster rides.
If you put your time, focus, and maybe money into making sure you get on those must-do things, you’ll leave yourself enough time to also enjoy everything else the park has to offer.
Complete Hong Kong Disneyland One-Day Itinerary Summarized
Early Park Entry
Frozen Ever After
Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs
Park Open
Hyperspace Mountain
Late Land Open
RC Racer
Toy Soldier Parachute Drop
Mystic Manor
Early Afternoon
Lunch
Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle! (time permitting)
Parade
Big Grizzly Mountain Runaway Mine Cars
Slinky Dog Spin (time permitting)
Time spent in Mystic Point, Grizzly Gulch, and Toy Story Land
Late Afternoon, Evening
Jungle River Cruise (remainder of Adventureland optional)
Castle Stage Show
Mix of Fantasyland / Tomorrowland / Main Street rides
Mickey and the Wondrous Book
Mix of Fantasyland / Tomorrowland / Main Street rides
Nighttime
Dinner
Shopping on Main Street
Nighttime show
