Thrillz Atlanta opening in June
- Thrillz said Atlanta will get a new indoor adventure park in June 2026, expanding the brand’s footprint beyond Pennsylvania and Connecticut, according to company pages. - A June 10 opening date has been reported locally, with more than 20 attractions including a 40-foot drop tower and 35-foot mega slide. - Atlanta, Georgia, remains listed as “coming soon” on Thrillz’s website, where visitors can also find group-events and FAQ pages.
Thrillz is preparing to open an Atlanta location in June, according to company webpages and local reports that identified the site as a new indoor adventure park in Doraville. The brand already operates parks in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and Danbury, Connecticut, and its website now lists “Atlanta, GA — Coming Soon.” People reported on May 16 that the Atlanta park will feature virtual-reality rides, trampolines, a 40-foot indoor drop tower and a 35-foot mega slide. Local outlet Secret Atlanta, cited by multiple follow-on reports, said the opening is scheduled for June 10. Thrillz’s own site has not, in the material publicly visible through search, posted a launch-day announcement or ticketing page for Atlanta yet. (thrillzparks.com) ### Where is the new park supposed to open? Doraville city records identify the project site as 4280 Northeast Expressway. A Planning Commission document for case CUP-24-03 names the applicant as Thrillz High Flying Adventure Park and describes the request as an indoor amusement park in an M-1 light manufacturing district. (aol.com) Local coverage has tied that address to the I-285 and I-85 interchange known as Spaghetti Junction, placing the project in northeast metro Atlanta rather than downtown. That location would put the park near one of the region’s busiest highway nodes. ### What rides and attractions have been reported? People said the Atlanta site will have more than 20 attractions, including full-size carnival rides, VR rides, trampolines, a 40-foot indoor drop tower and a 35-foot mega slide. (granicus_production_attachments.s3.amazonaws.com) Other reports repeating details from Secret Atlanta said the slide tower is being promoted as the only one of its kind in North America. (hoodline.com) Thrillz’s existing parks offer a guide to the company’s format, though Atlanta’s final lineup could differ. The company’s Connecticut FAQ describes obstacle courses with airbag landings, laser tag, a VR roller coaster, arcade games and paid ride add-ons including a drop tower and gyro ride. Group-events pages built for the Atlanta market also advertise laser tag and a 360-degree VR roller coaster ride, suggesting those attractions are part of the company’s planned sales pitch for schools, camps, teams and corporate outings. (aol.com) ### How does Atlanta fit into the company’s expansion? Thrillz’s website currently lists three markets: King of Prussia, Danbury and Atlanta. That makes Atlanta the company’s next identified opening beyond its existing Pennsylvania and Connecticut operations. (thrillzparks.com) The company markets itself as an indoor adventure concept built around trampolines, ninja-style obstacles, zip lines and virtual-reality experiences. (thrillzparks.com) In Danbury and King of Prussia, Thrillz also sells parties, team-building packages and timed admission products, showing the model it has used in other markets. ### What is still not confirmed on the company’s own site? Atlanta remains labeled “coming soon” on the Thrillz location page. (thrillzparks.com) The pages surfaced for Atlanta include group-events and FAQ sections, but the public search results reviewed did not show a live Atlanta ticket-purchase page with hours, prices or a posted grand-opening notice. That means the June opening window has been widely reported, and a June 10 date has appeared in local and syndicated coverage, but visitors may still need to wait for Thrillz to publish final operating details through its own channels. (thrillzparks.com) ### What should potential visitors watch for next? June 10, 2026 is the date cited in local and syndicated reports for the Atlanta debut. (thrillzparks.com) Thrillz’s website is the clearest place to watch for the next concrete step — a change from “coming soon” to live ticketing, posted hours or a formal opening announcement for Atlanta. (aol.com)